Get App
Call 801-410-7917

Taylorsville, Utah

No HOA Homes for Sale in Taylorsville, Utah

Taylorsville sits right in the middle of the Salt Lake Valley, bordered by West Valley City, Murray, and West Jordan, with quick access to both I-215 and Bangerter Highway. A lot of the city was built out between the 1960s and 1990s — established neighborhoods off Redwood Road, 4700 South, and 2700 West — well before HOAs became standard with new construction. That history is why Taylorsville still has a healthy supply of homes with no HOA dues, no architectural review board, and no rules about what you park in your driveway. For buyers coming from Daybreak, Herriman, or newer Lehi subdivisions where monthly dues run $50-$300, the difference in carrying cost adds up fast.

The trade-off is real and worth understanding. No HOA means no shared pool or clubhouse, no one plowing your sidewalk, and no covenant stopping a neighbor from parking an RV next to the property line. Most no-HOA stock in Taylorsville is single-family ramblers and split-entries on quarter-acre lots, often with mature trees, detached shops, or RV pads — the kind of setup that draws tradespeople, boat owners, and anyone who wants a garden without asking permission. Townhomes and condos here almost always carry HOA fees, so shoppers wanting zero dues should expect to focus on detached houses. Browse the active no-HOA listings below to see what's currently on the market 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

85 matching · page 3 of 4

Active listings

Prefer the map?

See all 85 no hoa homes on a map

Pan around Taylorsville and refine by drawing your own boundary.

🗺 Open map view

Common questions

About no hoa homes in Taylorsville.

Why does Taylorsville have so many homes without an HOA?

Most of Taylorsville was developed from the 1960s through the early 1990s, before HOAs became the default for Utah subdivisions. The older established neighborhoods around Plymouth View, Bennion, and the areas off 4100 South and Redwood Road were platted as standard county subdivisions with no governing association, and that's still the case today.

Can I park an RV, boat, or work trailer at a no-HOA home in Taylorsville?

Generally yes, as long as you follow Taylorsville City municipal code. The city has its own rules on RV parking (typically requiring it on an improved surface and not blocking sidewalks), but without an HOA layered on top, you're not facing additional covenant restrictions. Many no-HOA properties here were specifically built or updated with RV pads and gated side yards.

Are no-HOA homes in Taylorsville cheaper than comparable HOA properties?

The sticker price is often similar to nearby HOA neighborhoods, but the monthly carrying cost is lower because you're not paying $30-$200 in dues. Over a 30-year mortgage that's a meaningful number. Detached single-family homes without HOAs in Taylorsville typically run in the mid-$400s to high-$500s depending on size, lot, and updates.

Do I still need to maintain my yard and exterior to a certain standard?

Yes — Taylorsville City has nuisance and property maintenance ordinances covering weeds, junk vehicles, and structural upkeep. The difference is enforcement comes from the city rather than a neighborhood board, and standards are generally less strict than what an HOA would require.

Are there any townhomes or condos in Taylorsville without HOA fees?

Almost never. Attached housing in Utah essentially always carries an HOA because shared roofs, exterior walls, and common areas require collective maintenance and master insurance. If you want zero dues in Taylorsville, plan on a detached single-family home.

What should I check during due diligence on a no-HOA home here?

Pull the plat and confirm there really is no association of record — occasionally an old, dormant HOA still technically exists. Also check for any private road agreements, shared driveway easements, or irrigation/secondary water assessments, since those can function like small dues even without a formal HOA.