Investment Properties for Sale in South Jordan, Utah
South Jordan sits in the middle of one of the fastest-growing employment corridors in the country. Adobe, Oracle, Pluralsight, and the redevelopment of The Point at the old prison site have pulled steady, high-income tenants into the southwest Salt Lake Valley, and that demand shows up in rent rolls and occupancy rates across the city. Most investment activity here happens in Daybreak — the master-planned community west of Bangerter — along with Riverpark, South Jordan Heights, and pockets near the Jordan River Parkway. Single-family rentals dominate; small multi-family is scarce because of how the city is zoned, so investors hunting duplexes and fourplexes typically have to look north toward West Jordan or Midvale.
The math in South Jordan is different from a Weber County rental. Median prices in the $650K-$750K range mean gross rents rarely cover PITI on a 25%-down conventional loan, so the typical play is appreciation, principal paydown, and a long hold while The Point and the FrontRunner extension keep pulling jobs south. Properties with legal basement apartments, larger lots that allow an ADU, and homes near TRAX stations tend to underwrite better than standard tract product. Tenant quality is generally strong — dual-income tech and healthcare households, longer leases, lower turnover. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently available, and reach out if you want rent comps or cash-flow projections on a specific address.
May 2026 · South Jordan market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in South Jordan right now.
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Common questions
About investment properties in South Jordan.
What kinds of investment properties show up in South Jordan? ▾
Most of what trades here is single-family rentals in Daybreak, Riverpark, and the older Jordan River corridor neighborhoods, plus the occasional twin home or basement-apartment setup. True multi-family (duplex through fourplex) is rare in South Jordan because zoning leans heavily residential — investors looking for small multi-family usually expand the search to West Jordan, Midvale, or Murray.
What kind of rent can a South Jordan single-family home pull? ▾
A typical 3-bed/2.5-bath home in Daybreak rents in the $2,400-$2,900 range, and larger 4-5 bedroom homes near Mountain View Corridor or in District at South Jordan can clear $3,000-$3,500. Homes with finished basement apartments (ADUs where legally permitted) can stack a second $1,200-$1,500 income stream on top.
Does South Jordan allow short-term rentals like Airbnb? ▾
South Jordan restricts short-term rentals (under 30 days) in most residential zones, and Daybreak's HOA bans them outright. Mid-term furnished rentals aimed at traveling nurses at Intermountain Medical Center or Oracle/Adobe contractors at The Point are a more realistic play here than nightly stays.
Who rents in South Jordan? ▾
The tenant pool skews toward dual-income families and tech workers commuting to the Silicon Slopes corridor — Adobe, Pluralsight, Ancestry, and the growing employer base at The Point of the Mountain. That generally means longer lease terms, strong credit, and lower turnover than you'd see in a typical Salt Lake County rental.
What are property taxes and HOA fees like for an investor here? ▾
Utah property tax runs around 0.55-0.65% of assessed value, but the non-primary-residence rate is roughly 1.78x the owner-occupied rate, so plan on the higher figure when underwriting. Daybreak HOA dues typically run $135-$160/month and cover front-yard maintenance and community amenities, which simplifies turnover but eats into cash flow.
Is South Jordan a cash-flow market or an appreciation market? ▾
Honestly, it's an appreciation play. With median prices in the $650K-$750K range, gross rent multipliers rarely pencil out for pure cash flow the way Ogden or Clearfield can. Investors here are typically betting on continued growth from The Point development, the FrontRunner expansion, and Silicon Slopes job creation.