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Lake Point, Utah

Homes with Views for Sale in Lake Point, Utah

Lake Point sits at the north end of Tooele Valley, tucked against the Oquirrh Mountains where I-80 meets SR-36. It's one of the few spots in the Salt Lake metro where you can wake up to the Great Salt Lake out one window and the Oquirrh ridgeline out the other. Homes on the benches above Saddleback Boulevard and along the foothill cuts pick up long sightlines across the lake toward Antelope Island and Stansbury Island, while properties further south on the valley floor tend to frame the Stansbury Range and the Deseret Peak skyline. The view profile here is genuinely different from a Wasatch Front listing — it's open water, salt flats, sunsets that run 30 minutes long, and far less light pollution than anything east of the Point of the Mountain.

Buyers shopping view properties in Lake Point are usually trading a shorter SLC commute for acreage, elbow room, and that west-facing horizon. Most view lots run a half-acre to several acres, many with horse rights, and pricing typically sits below comparable view homes in Draper or Bountiful. Keep in mind that west-facing glass means real summer heat load and that lake-effect weather can roll through fast in winter — both worth asking about during showings. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market in Lake Point.

May 2026 · Lake Point market

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

Full Lake Point market report
Median sale
$599,990
3 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
29 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
100.3%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
22
active + pending

21 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

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Common questions

About homes with views in Lake Point.

What kinds of views do Lake Point homes actually have?

Most view homes here look west or northwest toward the Great Salt Lake, Antelope Island, and Stansbury Island, with the Oquirrh Mountains rising behind to the east. Properties on the higher benches get the longest sightlines, while valley-floor homes typically frame the Stansbury Range and Deseret Peak to the south. Sunset views are the headline feature for most buyers.

Do view homes in Lake Point cost a big premium?

View lots generally carry a 10–20% premium over comparable interior lots in the same subdivision, but Lake Point overall still prices below view-home neighborhoods in Draper, Bountiful, or the east bench of Salt Lake. Acreage and horse property availability are part of what makes the math work for buyers coming from the Wasatch Front.

How's the commute to Salt Lake City from a view home out here?

Lake Point to downtown SLC runs about 25–30 minutes via I-80 in normal traffic, and the SLC airport is roughly 20 minutes. Winter storms on the lake stretch coming over the causeway can slow that down, so factor weather days into your commute planning.

Are most view properties in Lake Point on acreage?

Yes — the majority of view homes sit on half-acre to 5-acre lots, and many include horse rights, outbuildings, or room for an RV and toys. Smaller subdivision lots exist closer to SR-36, but the signature Lake Point listings are the larger-parcel view properties up against the foothills.

Does the lake smell or bug situation affect view homes?

It's a fair question to ask on showings. The Great Salt Lake can produce brine fly hatches in late summer and occasional sulfur odors when wind patterns line up, though Lake Point is far enough from the worst of it that most residents say it's a non-issue day-to-day. Brief windows in July and August are when you'd notice it most.

What should I check on a west-facing view home before making an offer?

Ask about window treatments and any low-E or tinted glass on the west elevation — afternoon sun is intense and HVAC costs climb without it. Also confirm well versus culinary water source, septic versus sewer, and whether the view is protected by topography or open BLM/state land rather than just an empty private parcel that could be built on later.