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Brian Head, Utah

Townhomes for Sale in Brian Head, Utah

Brian Head sits at roughly 9,800 feet — the highest incorporated town in Utah — and that altitude shapes everything about owning a townhome here. Snowfall averages around 360 inches a year, the ski resort runs two mountains (Navajo and Giant Steps) with lifts a short walk or shuttle ride from most townhome clusters, and summers stay in the 60s and low 70s while St. George bakes 80 miles south. For most buyers, a townhome in Brian Head is either a second home, a short-term rental investment, or both. The HOA handles snow removal, exterior maintenance, and often plowed parking — a real consideration when you're not driving up from Las Vegas or Cedar City every weekend to shovel a roof.

Inventory tends to cluster in projects like Bear Paw, Cedar Breaks Lodge & Spa, Copper Chase, Steam Engine condos, and the townhomes along Hunter Ridge and Aspen Drive. Pricing runs widely depending on ski-in/ski-out access, square footage, and rental history — older two-bedroom units can start in the upper $200Ks, while newer four-bedroom townhomes near the lifts push past $800K. Nightly rental demand is strong from December through March and again in July and August when families escape the heat down south. Cedar City is the closest full-service town (about 35 minutes down SR-143), and the Cedar City Regional Airport handles the nearest commercial flights. Browse the active townhome listings below to see what's currently on the market in Brian Head.

May 2026 · Brian Head market

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

Full Brian Head market report
Median sale
$490,000
6 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
55 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
94.7%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
60
active + pending

3 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About townhomes for sale in Brian Head.

Why are townhomes more common than single-family homes in Brian Head?

Brian Head sits at nearly 9,800 feet, and developable land is limited by terrain, Forest Service boundaries, and steep slopes. Townhome and condo projects let builders cluster units near the lifts and centralize snow removal, which is a major operational issue when the town averages over 300 inches of snowfall a year. That's why a large share of the resort's inventory is attached housing rather than detached homes.

Can I rent out a Brian Head townhome on Airbnb or VRBO?

Most of Brian Head allows nightly rentals, which is unusual for Utah ski towns and a big reason investors buy here. That said, individual HOAs set their own rules — some require minimum stays, professional management, or cap the number of rental units in the building. Always read the HOA docs and CC&Rs before writing an offer if rental income is part of your plan.

What do HOA dues typically cover in Brian Head townhome communities?

Dues usually cover snow removal, exterior maintenance, roof reserves, water/sewer, trash, and common-area insurance. Given the snow load and short summer work window, reserves and roof line items tend to run higher than comparable Wasatch Front HOAs. Monthly dues commonly land in the $300–$700 range depending on the project and whether amenities like a clubhouse or hot tub are included.

How close are most townhomes to the ski lifts?

Brian Head Resort has two base areas — Navajo and Giant Steps — and many townhome projects sit within walking distance or a short shuttle ride of one of them. Ski-in/ski-out units exist but are limited and priced accordingly. Buyers focused on walk-to-lift access should look at Navajo Lodge area, Bristlecone, and the projects along Hunter Ridge Road.

What's the price range for townhomes in Brian Head right now?

Townhome pricing generally runs from the upper $200Ks for older, smaller units up to $900K+ for newer larger floor plans near the lifts. Condition, square footage, garage space, and rental history drive most of the spread. Browse the active listings below for current pricing on what's on the market this week.

Is Brian Head a year-round destination or mostly winter?

Winter is the busy season, but summer has grown significantly — the resort runs lift-served mountain biking, and the town is a cool-weather escape from St. George and Las Vegas, both within a few hours' drive. Spring and late fall are slower (the "mud seasons"), which matters if you're underwriting rental income month by month.