Horse Properties for Sale in Elsinore, Utah
Elsinore sits in the Sevier Valley about 12 miles south of Richfield, and it's one of the more practical small towns in central Utah for keeping horses on your own property. The town is surrounded by hay ground, alfalfa fields, and BLM range that climbs toward the Pahvant Range to the west and the Monroe Mountains to the east. Most residential lots are already zoned to allow livestock, irrigation shares from the Elsinore Canal and Sevier River system are common with rural parcels, and the valley floor sits at roughly 5,300 feet — high enough for cool summer nights but low enough that pastures stay usable longer than in places like Koosharem or Fairview.
Horse buyers tend to come here for three reasons: land cost per acre is dramatically lower than Heber, Eagle Mountain, or anything north of Nephi; you can ride out from many properties straight onto public ground; and the rodeo and ranching culture in Sevier County means farriers, large-animal vets in Richfield, and feed at IFA are all close by. Winters are real but manageable, with cold mornings and snow that usually clears within a few days off open pasture. I-70 is 10 minutes north for hauling to events in St. George, Cedar City, or up to Salt Lake. Look through the active listings below to see what's currently sitting on acreage with barns, arenas, or water shares attached.
June 2026 · Elsinore market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Elsinore right now.
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Active listings
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Common questions
About horse properties in Elsinore.
How much land do most Elsinore horse properties include? ▾
Most equestrian parcels here run from 1 to 5 acres, with a smaller pool of working setups in the 10-40 acre range out toward the Sevier River bottoms and the foothills east of town. Lots inside the old townsite tend to be flatter and irrigation-shared, while properties on the bench give you more elevation and drier footing.
Does Elsinore allow horses on residential lots? ▾
Yes. Elsinore is zoned for agricultural and rural-residential use across most of the town, and keeping horses is a long-standing local norm rather than a special exception. Confirm setbacks for barns and corrals with Sevier County before you build, especially if the parcel is under an acre.
Is irrigation water typically included with these properties? ▾
Many parcels carry shares in the Elsinore Canal or Central Utah Canal Company, which is a real value-add for pasture irrigation from roughly April through October. Always verify share counts and turn schedules in the title work — water rights here transfer separately and buyers occasionally get surprised at closing.
What's the riding access like around Elsinore? ▾
You can ride out from many properties directly onto BLM ground and the foothills toward Monroe Peak and the Pahvant Range. The Paiute ATV Trail system is also close, and the Sevier River corridor gives you flat, sandy footing for conditioning rides.
How do winters affect keeping horses here? ▾
Elsinore sits around 5,300 feet, so winters are cold but drier than the Wasatch Front — typically 30-40 inches of snow a year that doesn't linger long in pastures. Most owners run heated stock tanks from December through February and feed hay through the coldest stretch when pasture is dormant.
What price range should I expect for a usable horse property in Elsinore? ▾
Smaller 1-2 acre setups with a basic barn or loafing shed generally trade in the mid $400s to high $500s, while larger acreage with a finished home, arena, and water shares can run from the $700s into the low seven figures. Inventory is thin, so the active list below changes frequently.