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Taylorsville, Utah

Horse Properties for Sale in Taylorsville, Utah

Taylorsville sits squarely in the middle of the Salt Lake Valley, bordered by West Valley City, Murray, and West Jordan, and most of its land was built out as standard suburban residential decades ago. That makes true horse property inside city limits uncommon — the zoning here generally doesn't allow livestock, and lot sizes in neighborhoods around Bennion, Plymouth View, and the 4700 South corridor are too tight for a barn and turnout. The listings that do show up tend to be older legacy parcels near the Jordan River, holdovers from the area's farming era before I-215 and Bangerter Highway carved up the west side. If you see one come on the market, move quickly and verify the zoning before assuming horses are permitted.

For buyers who want Taylorsville's central location — 20 minutes to downtown Salt Lake, 15 to the airport, easy access to Cottonwood canyons for weekend rides — but need real acreage, it's worth widening the search south to Bluffdale, Herriman, Riverton, or Copperton, where half-acre-plus equestrian lots are still available and commute times back into Taylorsville stay reasonable. Boarding stables in South Jordan and along Camp Williams Road are another practical option if you want to keep horses without leaving a typical residential lot. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market, and reach out if you'd like help comparing Taylorsville options against nearby equestrian neighborhoods.

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

2 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About horse properties in Taylorsville.

Can I actually keep horses on residential property in Taylorsville?

It's rare. Taylorsville is a built-out suburb in the middle of the Salt Lake Valley, and most residential zones don't permit livestock. A small number of older parcels along the Jordan River corridor or remnants from the city's farming past may have legal non-conforming use, but you should always verify with Taylorsville City zoning before writing an offer.

Where do most Taylorsville-area buyers actually find horse property?

Buyers who want to keep horses typically look just south or west — Bluffdale, Herriman, Riverton, Copperton, and parts of West Jordan still have agricultural pockets and larger lots. Drive times to Taylorsville from those areas run 15–25 minutes, so you can keep the same commute and job access while having room for a barn and arena.

What lot size do I need to keep a horse near Taylorsville?

Most Salt Lake County municipalities that allow horses require a minimum of roughly half an acre for the first horse, with additional square footage per extra animal. Taylorsville's general residential zones don't meet that threshold, so listings shown here are usually larger legacy parcels or properties marketed for hobby/equestrian potential rather than active horse use.

Are there boarding stables close to Taylorsville?

Yes — South Jordan, Bluffdale, and Herriman all have boarding facilities within a 20-minute drive, and the equestrian community along 2700 West and Camp Williams Road is well established. Boarding is a common route for Taylorsville residents who want horses without leaving the neighborhood.

How does the Jordan River Parkway factor in for riders?

The Jordan River Parkway runs along Taylorsville's western edge and includes equestrian-friendly segments further south through Bluffdale and Draper. Homeowners near the corridor sometimes have trail access, though formal horse trailheads are concentrated south of 10600 South.

What should I check before assuming a Taylorsville listing can house horses?

Pull the parcel's zoning designation from Salt Lake County, confirm any non-conforming use status with Taylorsville City, and check setback requirements for barns and manure storage. Also verify water rights or secondary water availability — irrigation matters for pasture, and not every lot in the valley has shares attached.