Homes with RV Parking for Sale in Lake Point, Utah
Lake Point sits at the north end of Tooele Valley, right where I-80 meets SR-36, which makes it one of the easiest spots in the state to keep a travel trailer, fifth wheel, or boat at home. Lots here tend to run larger than what you'd find in Stansbury Park or along the Wasatch Front — half-acre to full-acre parcels are common, and a lot of the newer builds off Canyon Rim and Lake Point Drive were designed with a third garage bay, a side gate, or a dedicated concrete pad already poured. For owners who tow regularly to the Uintas, Lake Powell, or out to the West Desert, that matters: you're 35 minutes to the Salt Lake airport, 20 minutes to the Saltair boat launches, and you're not fighting an HOA over where the RV sleeps.
Buyers shopping Lake Point for RV-friendly properties should pay attention to a few practical things — gate width (12 feet is the realistic minimum for a wide fifth wheel), pad length, 30/50-amp service near the parking spot, and whether the lot has the slope to actually back a rig in. Some of the older homes off Sheep Lane have huge lots but tight access; the newer subdivisions tend to have cleaner approaches but stricter CC&Rs, so read them. Tooele County zoning is generally friendlier to outdoor storage than Salt Lake County, which is a big part of why Lake Point keeps drawing toy-haulers out of the city. Browse the active listings below to see which properties currently have the parking setup you need.
May 2026 · Lake Point market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Lake Point right now.
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Common questions
About homes with rv parking in Lake Point.
What counts as RV parking on a Lake Point listing? ▾
It varies. Some listings mean a dedicated concrete pad with a gate and hookups, others just mean there's room on the side of the house to park a trailer on gravel. Check the photos and ask about gate width, pad dimensions, and whether power and a dump cleanout are run to the spot before assuming it'll fit your rig.
Do Lake Point HOAs allow RVs to be parked on the property? ▾
It depends on the subdivision. Several of the newer communities along Canyon Rim and the Lake Point Bench have CC&Rs that restrict visible RV storage or limit how long a trailer can sit in the driveway. Older county parcels off Sheep Lane and Marina Drive typically have no HOA at all, which is why they're popular with toy-hauler owners.
Is a third garage bay big enough to store an RV in Lake Point? ▾
A standard third bay (around 24 feet deep, 9-10 foot door) will hold a small travel trailer, a boat, or a side-by-side, but not a Class A motorhome or a long fifth wheel. If indoor RV storage matters to you, look for listings that specifically call out an RV garage — 14-foot doors and 40+ foot depth are what you want.
How does Lake Point compare to Stansbury or Erda for RV owners? ▾
Lake Point has the shortest commute to Salt Lake of the three, and lots tend to be a middle ground — bigger than Stansbury Park, often smaller than Erda's acreage parcels. Erda gives you the most room and the loosest zoning; Lake Point gives you better freeway access for weekend trips out to Wendover, the Uintas, or south to Powell.
Are there power and water hookups typical at these RV pads? ▾
On properties built or upgraded in the last ten years, yes — it's fairly common to see a 30-amp or 50-amp outlet, a hose bib, and occasionally a sewer cleanout at the pad. On older homes you'll usually need to add those yourself. Ask the listing agent or check the seller's disclosure.
What price range do RV-friendly homes in Lake Point usually fall into? ▾
Most homes with real RV parking — meaning a proper pad or oversized garage — land somewhere in the upper-$500Ks to low-$800Ks depending on lot size, age, and whether it's an actual RV garage versus just side parking. Custom homes on acreage above the bench can run well past a million.