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Salt Lake City, Utah

Condos for Sale in Salt Lake City, Utah

Condo living in Salt Lake City covers a wider range than most buyers expect. On one end you have glass-and-steel high-rises downtown — Liberty Sky, 99 West, Regent, City Creek's Richards Court and Promontory — where residents walk to TRAX, Delta Center events, and the restaurants along Main Street. On the other end you have 1970s walk-ups in Sugar House, brick conversions in the Avenues, and newer townhome-style projects pushing into Ballpark, Granary, and Central Ninth. Pricing reflects that spread: entry-level one-bedrooms still surface under $300K, while top-floor downtown units with Wasatch views regularly clear $1M.

The appeal here is practical. Salt Lake winters mean snow management matters, and HOA-handled exteriors take that off your plate. Proximity to the U of U medical campus, the airport (15-20 minutes via I-80), and ski access at Alta, Brighton, Solitude, and Snowbird (45 minutes up the canyons) makes a lock-and-leave condo a strong fit for medical professionals, frequent travelers, and skiers who don't want a yard. Buyers should pay close attention to HOA financial health, FHA/VA approval status if that matters for financing, and short-term rental rules, which Salt Lake City enforces tightly. Browse the active condo listings below to see what's currently on the market across downtown, Sugar House, the Avenues, and surrounding neighborhoods.

May 2026 · Salt Lake City market

Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Salt Lake City right now.

Full Salt Lake City market report
Median sale
$577,450
270 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
7 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
99.3%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
754
active + pending

278 matching · page 3 of 12

Active listings

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Common questions

About condos for sale in Salt Lake City.

What's the typical price range for a condo in Salt Lake City right now?

Most active condo listings fall between the high $200Ks for older units in Sugar House or Rose Park and $700K+ for newer downtown high-rises like Liberty Sky or 99 West. Two-bedroom units in walkable neighborhoods like the Avenues or Central Ninth typically run $350K-$500K. The market shifts quickly, so the listings below show current pricing.

Do Salt Lake City condos come with HOA fees, and what do they cover?

Almost all do. Monthly HOA dues in SLC commonly run $200-$600 depending on the building, with high-rise towers downtown sometimes exceeding $800. Fees usually cover exterior maintenance, water, trash, snow removal, and shared amenities like gyms or rooftop decks. Always review the HOA's reserve study and recent meeting minutes before writing an offer.

Which Salt Lake neighborhoods have the most condo inventory?

Downtown (especially around 200 South and the Central Business District), Sugar House, the Avenues, 9th & 9th, and the U of U campus area carry the bulk of condo inventory. Each has a different feel — downtown is high-rise and walkable to TRAX, Sugar House skews mid-rise and mixed-use, and the Avenues has older brick conversions with character.

Can I use FHA or VA financing on a Salt Lake City condo?

Only if the complex is FHA-approved or VA-approved, and many SLC buildings are not. Newer downtown towers in particular often fail the owner-occupancy ratio required for FHA. Conventional financing with 5-10% down is the more common route. Your lender can pull the approval status before you tour a specific building.

Are short-term rentals like Airbnb allowed in SLC condos?

Salt Lake City's zoning generally prohibits short-term rentals under 30 days in most residential zones, and the majority of condo HOAs prohibit them in their CC&Rs as well. A handful of zoned-commercial downtown buildings are exceptions. If rental income matters to your plan, get the HOA documents and verify zoning before committing.

How does condo ownership compare to a single-family home in this market?

Condos trade roughly $150-$250 per square foot less than detached homes in the same neighborhood and skip the yard work and roof replacements. The trade-off is HOA dues, shared walls, and tighter rules on pets and renovations. For buyers who want walkability to downtown, the U, or TRAX without the maintenance load, the math often favors a condo.