Get App
Call 801-845-3989

Vineyard, Utah

Homes with Solar Panels for Sale in Vineyard, Utah

Vineyard sits on the east shore of Utah Lake in northern Utah County, a city that barely existed fifteen years ago and now holds one of the youngest, fastest-growing populations in the state. New construction dominates the housing stock — most homes here were built after 2015 — which is exactly why solar is more common in Vineyard than in older Utah County cities. Builders like Ivory, Holmes, and Edge installed PV systems on a meaningful share of homes in The Waters Edge, Holdaway Fields, and the Megaplex-area townhome rows, and many original buyers added panels during the federal tax credit window. With roughly 222 sunny days a year and Rocky Mountain Power's net metering program (grandfathered for systems installed before the 2017 rate change), a solar home in Vineyard can offset a real chunk of summer AC load when temperatures hit the mid-90s.

Price-wise, solar-equipped homes in Vineyard generally span the mid-$400s for townhomes up to the $700s and $800s for larger single-family near the lakefront and the under-construction Utah City development. Roof orientation matters here — south and west exposures along the grid-aligned streets tend to produce best — and many listings will note whether the system is owned outright, financed, or on a transferable lease through providers like Sunrun or Vivint Solar (now Sunrun). That distinction changes your closing paperwork and your monthly math considerably. Browse the active listings below to see which Vineyard solar homes are on the market right now.

May 2026 · Vineyard market

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

Full Vineyard market report
Median sale
$724,950
8 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
18 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
100.4%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
56
active + pending

1 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About homes with solar panels in Vineyard.

Are the solar panels on Vineyard listings usually owned or leased?

It's a real mix. Homes built in the 2016-2019 stretch often have owned systems that were rolled into the original mortgage, while later builds and resales sometimes carry a Sunrun or Sunnova lease. Always check the listing remarks or ask your agent — an assumable lease requires buyer credit approval and adds a step to closing.

Does Rocky Mountain Power still offer good net metering in Vineyard?

Systems installed before November 2017 were grandfathered into the original 1:1 net metering rate through 2035. Newer systems fall under the Export Credit program, which pays a lower rate for excess production. When you're shopping Vineyard solar homes, the install date directly affects how much the system is worth to you.

How much can solar realistically offset on a Vineyard home?

A typical 6-8 kW system on a Vineyard rooftop produces roughly 9,000-12,000 kWh per year, which covers most or all of an average household's usage outside of peak July and August. Homes with electric heat pumps or EV charging will see a smaller percentage offset than gas-furnace homes.

Do HOAs in Vineyard restrict solar panels?

Utah state law (HB 330) prevents HOAs from outright banning rooftop solar, but Vineyard HOAs in communities like The Cottages and Bridgeport can require panels to be roof-mounted, not ground-mounted, and may regulate visible conduit. If you're planning to add panels post-purchase, request the architectural guidelines before you close.

Will a solar home in Vineyard appraise higher?

Owned systems typically add value at appraisal — Utah County appraisers generally use the PV Value tool or comparable sales adjustments, and an owned 7 kW system can add $10,000-$18,000 depending on age and condition. Leased systems do not add appraised value because they're not part of the real property.

What should I check during inspection on a solar-equipped home?

Ask for the original installation documents, the inverter age (most string inverters last 10-15 years), recent production data from the monitoring app, and any roof penetrations where panels are mounted. Also confirm the system is properly transferred with Rocky Mountain Power so your interconnection agreement carries over at closing.