Homes with Acreage for Sale in Soda Springs, Utah
Soda Springs sits on the high benches above Fairview in Sanpete County, where Skyline Drive climbs into the Manti-La Sal National Forest and cabin lots give way to working acreage. Most parcels here run from 2 acres up to 40+ acres, with a mix of treed mountain land, open meadow, and pasture suitable for horses or a small cattle operation. Elevations push past 7,000 feet in spots, so buyers should expect real winters — snow on the ground from late November into April, gravel road access in some sections, and the need for snowmobiles or a plow to reach the back of larger lots. Power and culinary water vary parcel by parcel; some properties run on wells and septic, others tie into shared systems, and a handful of remote tracts are fully off-grid with solar and cisterns.
Buyers come here for space, hunting access (units 16 and 17 are productive for elk and mule deer), and proximity to Skyline Drive ATV trails without the Park City price tag. Fairview town sits about 15 minutes down the canyon for groceries and fuel, Mt. Pleasant adds a hospital and more services, and Provo is roughly an hour north via US-89. Acreage listings in this pocket move seasonally — inventory loosens in summer when access roads open and tightens through winter. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market.
May 2026 · Soda Springs market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Soda Springs right now.
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Active listings
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Common questions
About homes with acreage in Soda Springs.
How much land do most acreage properties in Soda Springs include? ▾
Parcel sizes vary widely. Recreational cabin lots typically run 2 to 5 acres, while ranch-style tracts and timbered mountain parcels often range from 10 to 40 acres or more. A handful of larger holdings above 80 acres come up each year, usually adjacent to forest service boundaries.
Is year-round access available on Soda Springs acreage? ▾
It depends on the road. Properties along maintained county routes and the lower portions of Skyline Drive generally have year-round access, though four-wheel drive is smart in winter. Higher elevation parcels off unmaintained spurs are often summer-only, with snowmobile or UTV access from December through April.
Can I run horses or livestock on these properties? ▾
Yes, most acreage in the Soda Springs area is zoned for agricultural use and supports horses, cattle, or small livestock. Pasture quality varies with elevation and water rights, so check whether the parcel includes irrigation shares or relies on dryland grazing and seasonal runoff.
Do these properties have well and septic, or city utilities? ▾
Nearly all acreage parcels in this area use private wells and septic systems. Some shared water systems exist in older subdivisions. Power is available on most accessible tracts, but truly remote parcels may require solar, propane, and cistern hauling — confirm utility status before writing an offer.
What's the price range for acreage here? ▾
Smaller recreational lots with cabins start in the mid $200s, while improved homes on 10 to 20 acres typically run from the mid $400s into the $700s depending on build quality, water rights, and views. Large ranch tracts with hay ground or live water can exceed $1M.
How far is Soda Springs from the Wasatch Front? ▾
Plan on about an hour from Provo and roughly 90 minutes to two hours from Salt Lake City via US-89 through Spanish Fork Canyon. Fairview is the nearest town with fuel and a grocery stop, about 15 minutes down the canyon from most acreage parcels.