No HOA Homes for Sale in Spring Glen, Utah
Spring Glen sits just north of Price along US-6 in Carbon County, a rural pocket of pasture, cottonwoods along the Price River, and homes spread across one to five acre parcels. Almost none of it was developed as a planned community, which is why the no-HOA inventory here is essentially the whole town. Buyers come to Spring Glen specifically to escape dues, design committees, and rules about RVs, chicken coops, shop buildings, and what color you can paint the trim. The trade-off is rural living: well and septic on most properties, county-maintained side roads, and a 15-minute drive to groceries in Price or coal-country jobs at the Sufco and Skyline mines.
Pricing tends to reflect land and outbuildings more than finish level — a 1970s rambler on two irrigated acres with a detached shop often outprices a newer home on a small lot. Carbon School District serves the area, with Sally Mauro Elementary in Helper and Carbon High in Price. Winters are milder than the Wasatch Back, summers are dry and hot, and the Book Cliffs and Nine Mile Canyon are right out the back door for hunting, ATVs, and fishing. If acreage, no monthly dues, and room for animals or a shop matter more than a manicured cul-de-sac, this is the right zip code. Browse the active no-HOA listings below to see what's currently on the market in Spring Glen.
December 2025 · Spring Glen market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Spring Glen right now.
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Active listings
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Common questions
About no hoa homes in Spring Glen.
Do most homes in Spring Glen come without an HOA? ▾
Yes. Spring Glen is an unincorporated community in Carbon County made up largely of older farmsteads, custom-built homes on acreage, and rural subdivisions that were never platted with a homeowners association. The majority of properties here carry no HOA dues or architectural review board.
What rules still apply if there's no HOA? ▾
Carbon County zoning and ordinances still govern setbacks, livestock, outbuildings, and short-term rentals. Some properties also have recorded CC&Rs from the original subdivision plat — those can outlast any HOA and still restrict things like mobile homes or junk vehicles. Always read the title commitment carefully.
Can I keep horses or livestock on a no-HOA property in Spring Glen? ▾
On most parcels, yes. A lot of Spring Glen sits on A-1 or RR-1 zoning with one to five acre lots, and horses, chickens, and small livestock are common up and down Spring Glen Road. Confirm the specific zoning on any parcel through the Carbon County recorder before you write an offer.
Are no-HOA homes here cheaper than comparable homes in Price or Helper? ▾
Price per square foot in Spring Glen tends to run similar to Price city, but you're typically getting more land and outbuildings for the money. The savings show up in carrying costs — no monthly dues, and irrigation water shares often come with the property instead of being billed by a community.
What should I check on well, septic, and water shares before buying? ▾
Most homes here are on private well and septic rather than municipal utilities. Order a septic inspection and a well flow/water quality test during your due diligence, and ask the seller for documentation of any Price River or Carbon Canal shares — those convey separately and matter for irrigating pasture or lawn.
How many no-HOA listings are usually active in Spring Glen? ▾
Spring Glen is a small market — inventory typically runs in the single digits at any given time, and properties with acreage move quickly when priced right. Setting up a saved search is the practical way to catch new listings the day they hit the MLS.