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Taylorsville, Utah

Gated Community Homes for Sale in Taylorsville, Utah

Taylorsville sits in the middle of the Salt Lake Valley, about 15 minutes from downtown Salt Lake City and 20 from the airport, which makes it a practical home base for commuters working anywhere from the Granary District to Bluffdale. Gated communities here are not the sprawling country-club setups you'd see in Draper or Holladay — Taylorsville's gated options tend to be smaller pockets of patio homes, townhomes, and 55+ developments tucked off Redwood Road, 2700 West, and Bangerter Highway. Buyers shopping these neighborhoods are usually after a quieter street, controlled access, and lower-maintenance living rather than acreage or estate-style grounds.

Pricing in Taylorsville's gated pockets generally runs from the upper $300s for smaller townhome units up through the mid-$700s for detached single-family homes inside HOA-managed gates, with most active inventory clustered in the $400k–$550k range. HOA dues typically cover gate maintenance, common-area landscaping, and sometimes snow removal — worth checking line by line because coverage varies a lot between communities. The Jordan School District serves most of the city, with Granite School District covering the eastern edge, and residents are within a short drive of Valley Fair Mall, the Jordan River Parkway trail, and Mountain View Corridor for quick access south. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently behind the gates in Taylorsville.

May 2026 · Taylorsville market

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

Full Taylorsville market report
Median sale
$477,750
46 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
20 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
99.5%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
147
active + pending

4 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About gated community homes in Taylorsville.

How many gated communities are there in Taylorsville?

Taylorsville has a handful of gated developments rather than dozens — most are smaller HOA-run communities of 30 to 150 homes, often built in the 1990s and 2000s. You'll find them concentrated near 4700 South, around 5400 South, and off Redwood Road. Active listings turn over quickly, so the count of available homes behind gates is usually in the single digits at any given time.

Are most gated communities in Taylorsville age-restricted (55+)?

A meaningful share of them are, yes. Several of Taylorsville's gated pockets were built as 55+ or active-adult communities with single-level patio homes and HOA-managed yards. There are also all-ages gated townhome communities, so check the HOA's age restriction language before writing an offer if that matters to your household.

What do HOA fees typically cover in these neighborhoods?

Most cover gate access and maintenance, exterior common areas, and landscaping of shared spaces. Some include front-yard landscaping, roof reserves, or snow removal on private streets, while others stop at the gate itself. Monthly dues in Taylorsville gated communities typically run $150 to $350 depending on what's bundled in.

Is street parking allowed inside the gates?

It varies by community, and most Taylorsville HOAs restrict overnight street parking to keep private roads clear for emergency access and snow plows. If you have a third vehicle, a trailer, or expect frequent overnight guests, read the CC&Rs carefully — some communities allow guest passes, others don't permit street parking at all.

How does resale hold up in Taylorsville's gated neighborhoods compared to non-gated homes nearby?

Gated and HOA-maintained homes here tend to attract a steady pool of downsizers and buyers wanting low-maintenance living, which keeps demand consistent. They generally sell at a modest premium per square foot over comparable non-gated homes in the same zip codes, though appreciation tracks the broader Salt Lake Valley market rather than running ahead of it.

Can I rent out a home I buy in a gated Taylorsville community?

Many of these HOAs have rental caps or outright owner-occupancy requirements, especially the 55+ communities. If you're buying as an investment or planning to rent later, request the HOA's rental policy and current rental count in writing during your due diligence period before removing contingencies.