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Springville, Utah

New Construction Homes for Sale in Springville, Utah

Springville sits at the south end of Utah County between Provo and Spanish Fork, and new construction here has picked up considerably over the last few years as builders work both the east bench against the Wasatch and the flatter ground west toward I-15. Most of the activity is concentrated in newer subdivisions off Canyon Road, around the Hobble Creek Golf Course corridor, and in the Westfields area near the freeway. Buyers shopping new builds in Springville tend to be families wanting modern floor plans within a 15-minute drive of BYU, UVU, or the tech jobs along Silicon Slopes, plus retirees downsizing from older Provo and Orem homes who want main-level living without the maintenance.

Price points run a wide range — townhomes and smaller single-family starts can land in the upper $400s, while semi-custom builds on larger east-side lots with Wasatch views regularly clear $900K and up. Local builders active in town include Ivory, Visionary, Edge, and several smaller custom shops working spec homes on infill lots. Springville also keeps a distinct identity from its neighbors thanks to the Art City reputation, the rodeo, and a walkable Main Street, so newer neighborhoods aren't quite as cookie-cutter as what you'll see further north. Standing inventory, to-be-built contracts, and quick-move-in homes all show up on the MLS here, and incentives shift month to month as rates move. Browse the active new construction listings below to see what's currently available, what stage of build each home is in, and which builders are offering rate buy-downs.

May 2026 · Springville market

Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Springville right now.

Full Springville market report
Median sale
$400,000
29 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
24 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
99.0%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
116
active + pending

19 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About new construction homes in Springville.

What new construction neighborhoods are most active in Springville right now?

The east bench around Canyon Road and the Hobble Creek area sees the most semi-custom and view-lot building, while Westfields and the areas closer to I-15 carry more production builder inventory and townhome projects. Smaller infill projects also pop up regularly south of 400 South and near the Spring Creek corridor.

Which builders are working in Springville?

Ivory Homes, Visionary Homes, Edge Homes, and Fieldstone have all had recent activity in Springville, alongside a handful of local custom builders doing one-off spec homes. The mix changes year to year as land trades hands, so the active MLS list is the most accurate read on who's building what.

What's the price range for new construction in Springville?

Townhomes and smaller single-family starts typically begin in the upper $400s to low $500s. Standard production homes on the west side run roughly $550K to $750K, and semi-custom or custom homes on east bench view lots commonly land between $850K and $1.4M depending on lot size and finishes.

Can I still pick finishes, or are most new homes already built?

Both options show up on the MLS. Quick-move-in inventory homes are already framed or finished with selections locked, while to-be-built listings let you choose floor plan, lot, and interior finishes through the builder's design center. The listing remarks usually indicate which stage a home is in.

Do new construction homes in Springville come with builder incentives?

Yes — most production builders here run rotating incentives, typically rate buy-downs, closing cost credits, or free upgrades on standing inventory. The catch is that incentives usually require using the builder's preferred lender, so it's worth comparing the total cost rather than just the rate.

Should I use my own agent when buying new construction?

Bring your own agent. The sales rep at the model home represents the builder, not you. A buyer's agent can review the builder contract (which is very different from a standard REPC), push on upgrades and incentives, and coordinate independent inspections at framing and final walk-through. The builder pays the buyer-agent commission in almost every case.

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