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Taylorsville, Utah

Homes with Views for Sale in Taylorsville, Utah

Taylorsville sits in the middle of the Salt Lake Valley, which means view homes here are almost always about the mountains rather than water or canyon drama. The Wasatch Range runs the entire eastern horizon — Mount Olympus, the Cottonwood peaks, and Lone Peak are all visible from upper floors and west-facing yards across the city. Homes on the western edge of town, closer to Bangerter Highway, often pull in Oquirrh Mountain views to the west and catch the sunset light hitting Kennecott's ridgeline. Because Taylorsville is relatively flat compared to bench communities like Holladay or Sandy, the best sightlines usually come from two-story homes, raised ramblers on slightly elevated lots, or properties backing to open space along the Jordan River Parkway.

Buyers shopping view homes in Taylorsville are typically weighing the trade-off between price and elevation. You can spend considerably less here than in a bench neighborhood and still wake up to the Wasatch out the kitchen window, especially in established areas around Bennion, Plymouth View, and the streets east of Redwood Road. Commute access is part of the appeal too — I-215 and Bangerter put downtown Salt Lake, the airport, and the Cottonwood canyons all inside a 20- to 30-minute drive. Browse the active listings below to see which view properties are currently on the market, and pay attention to lot orientation and upper-floor window placement, since those details make or break the view experience day to day.

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

58 matching · page 1 of 3

Active listings

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Common questions

About homes with views in Taylorsville.

What kind of views do Taylorsville homes typically offer?

Most view homes here look east toward the Wasatch — Mount Olympus, Twin Peaks, and Lone Peak dominate the skyline. Some properties on the west side of the city catch Oquirrh Mountain sunsets instead, and a handful of elevated lots near 6200 South pick up valley views across the Salt Lake basin.

Which Taylorsville neighborhoods have the best view lots?

The bench areas east of Redwood Road and pockets near Bennion tend to sit slightly higher and give cleaner Wasatch sightlines. Homes backing to the Jordan River parkway can also offer open views without a neighbor's roof in the frame, since the corridor stays undeveloped.

Do view homes in Taylorsville cost noticeably more?

A clear mountain view typically adds somewhere in the range of $15,000 to $40,000 over a comparable home on an interior lot, depending on how unobstructed it is. Two-story homes with upper-floor view windows often command the bigger premium since the sightlines hold up better long-term.

Will future development block the views?

Taylorsville is largely built out, so the risk of a new subdivision rising up and blocking your view is lower than in places like Herriman or Bluffdale. That said, infill projects and second-story additions on neighboring lots do happen, so it's worth checking zoning and lot setbacks before committing.

Are there view homes near the Jordan River trail?

Yes — properties along the river corridor between 4800 South and 5400 South often have open western or southern exposure thanks to the parkway greenbelt. These homes tend to move quickly because the combination of trail access and open sightlines is hard to replicate elsewhere in the city.

How does air quality affect view properties along the Wasatch Front?

Winter inversions can obscure the mountains for stretches in January and February, which is the trade-off for living in the valley. Spring, summer, and fall typically deliver clear views of the Wasatch most days, and homes on slightly elevated lots sometimes sit just above the worst of the inversion layer.