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Central Valley, Utah

Homes with RV Parking for Sale in Central Valley, Utah

Central Valley sits in the heart of Sevier County along Highway 118, a small farming community between Monroe and Richfield where lots are big, zoning is forgiving, and almost every other driveway has a trailer or camper parked on it. RV parking isn't a luxury feature here — it's how people live. Fish Lake is 45 minutes east, Lake Powell is a three-hour haul south, and Fremont Indian State Park, Big Rock Candy Mountain, and the Paiute ATV Trail are all within day-trip range, so toy haulers, fifth wheels, and side-by-sides earn their keep year-round. Buyers searching this filter are usually looking for a half-acre or larger lot with gated side access, a concrete or gravel pad behind the home, and ideally a 30/50 amp hookup.

Because Central Valley is unincorporated and most parcels are rural or ag-residential, you won't run into the HOA headaches that plague RV owners in Lehi or South Jordan subdivisions. Expect winters in the teens and summers in the low 90s — dry heat that's easy on rigs but hard on uncovered tires, which is why detached RV shops with 12- to 14-foot doors show up often in this price band. Median home prices in the area generally run well below the Wasatch Front, and acreage is part of what you're buying. Browse the active listings below to see which Central Valley homes currently have the pad, the gate width, and the lot size to handle your rig.

June 2026 · Central Valley market

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

Full Central Valley market report
Median sale
$346,162
1 closed in June 2026
Median DOM
28 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
96.4%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
13
active + pending

7 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About homes with rv parking in Central Valley.

What counts as RV parking on a Central Valley listing?

Most MLS listings here flag RV parking as either a dedicated concrete or gravel pad alongside the home, a drive-through gate with space behind the house, or a detached RV garage/shop. On larger lots and ag-zoned parcels around Central Valley, it's common to see full hookups (30/50 amp, water, and a dump) since many owners run trailers, toy haulers, or fifth wheels for hunting and Lake Powell trips.

Are there HOA or county rules limiting RV storage in Central Valley?

Central Valley itself is unincorporated Sevier County, and most properties here sit on rural or agricultural lots without an HOA, so on-site RV parking is generally allowed. That said, if a property is part of a newer subdivision, check the CC&Rs — a few developments in the broader Richfield-Monroe area restrict RVs to behind the front building line or require screening.

How much extra do RV-friendly homes typically cost?

In the Sevier County market, a home with an existing RV pad and gated side access usually runs $5,000–$15,000 more than a comparable home without one. Properties with a fully enclosed RV shop or barn (14-foot doors, power, heat) can add $40,000–$80,000 because those structures double as workshops for ATVs, boats, and farm equipment.

Is the lot size in Central Valley big enough for a fifth wheel or Class A?

Yes — most Central Valley lots are a half-acre and up, with plenty of one-to-five-acre parcels along 1000 South and the side roads toward Annabella. That's more than enough room for a 40-foot Class A, a boat, and a truck without blocking the driveway, which is harder to pull off in tighter Wasatch Front cities.

Do RV pads here usually have hookups, or just parking surface?

It varies. Bare gravel or concrete pads are the most common, but a fair number of sellers have added a 30/50 amp pedestal and a frost-proof hose bib since winters here drop into the teens. Full sewer dumps are less common on residential lots — owners typically use the local dump station in Richfield or at nearby campgrounds.

How many RV-parking homes are usually on the market in Central Valley?

Inventory in Central Valley is thin overall — often only a handful of active listings at any given time, and RV-friendly homes are a subset of that. It's worth setting up an alert and also watching neighboring Monroe, Elsinore, and Richfield, since buyers willing to drive five to ten minutes open up a much larger pool.