Townhomes for Sale in Salt Lake City, Utah
Townhomes have become Salt Lake City's practical middle ground between a downtown condo and a detached home on a quarter-acre lot. Inventory clusters in Sugar House, the Avenues fringes, Central 9th, Marmalade, and the redeveloping Granary District, where developers have spent the last decade converting warehouses and infill lots into three-story attached housing. Buyers gravitate here for a few concrete reasons: walkable access to TRAX and FrontRunner, a 15-minute drive to SLC International, and proximity to the U of U, Intermountain Medical Center, and the downtown tech employers along 400 South. Most newer builds run 1,400–2,200 square feet with an attached one or two-car garage, rooftop deck options, and Wasatch views from the upper floor.
Climate shapes the appeal more than people expect. Salt Lake gets real winters — about 54 inches of snow a year — and a townhome HOA that plows the driveway and handles roof maintenance is worth the monthly dues for buyers who'd rather ski Alta on a Saturday than shovel. Summers run hot and dry in the valley (90s common in July), so xeriscaped common areas and shared landscaping cut both water bills and weekend chores. Pricing currently spans roughly $375K for older units near North Temple up to $750K+ for new construction in 9th & 9th or near Liberty Park. Browse the active townhome listings below to see what's on the market right now across the city.
May 2026 · Salt Lake City market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Salt Lake City right now.
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Common questions
About townhomes for sale in Salt Lake City.
What's the typical price range for a townhome in Salt Lake City? ▾
Most Salt Lake City townhomes trade between the high $300s and the mid $600s, with newer construction in Sugar House, 9th & 9th, and the Avenues edges pushing past $700K. Older brick rowhouses near downtown and entry-level units in Glendale or Rose Park sit on the lower end. Square footage, garage count, and HOA scope drive most of the spread.
Which Salt Lake neighborhoods have the most townhome inventory? ▾
Sugar House, Central 9th, Marmalade, and the downtown core (especially around 200 South and the Granary District) see steady townhome turnover. East-side pockets near Foothill Drive and the U of U also have small attached-home developments, and the west side around Jordan Meadows offers newer, lower-priced builds.
Do most Salt Lake City townhomes come with HOAs, and what do dues cover? ▾
Nearly all do. Dues typically run $150–$400 per month and usually cover exterior maintenance, roof reserves, landscaping, snow removal, and sometimes water or trash. Always pull the HOA financials and reserve study before writing an offer — older complexes occasionally face special assessments for siding or roofing.
Are townhomes a good option for first-time buyers in Salt Lake? ▾
Yes — they're often the most realistic entry point into desirable east-side and downtown neighborhoods where detached homes start in the $700s. Lock-and-leave maintenance also fits buyers commuting to the U, the hospitals, or downtown employers like Goldman Sachs and the tech corridor.
Can I park a truck or ski gear easily in a Salt Lake townhome? ▾
Most newer builds include a one or two-car attached garage, which handles a mid-size SUV and gear racks fine. Older downtown rowhouses sometimes only have tandem or surface parking, so if you're hauling a boat, trailer, or full-size pickup, check garage dimensions and HOA rules on exterior parking before committing.
How does snow removal work for townhome owners here? ▾
Salt Lake averages around 54 inches of snow a year, and the HOA usually handles driveways, walkways, and common areas — one of the main reasons buyers choose attached housing over a detached home. Owners are typically responsible only for their private patio or balcony.