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Lindon, Utah

Homes with Acreage for Sale in Lindon, Utah

Lindon sits in the middle of Utah County between Orem and Pleasant Grove, and it's one of the few Wasatch Front cities that still has a real stock of homes on half-acre, one-acre, and occasionally larger parcels. The east bench above 800 East is where most of the acreage lives — older orchard properties, horse setups along the foothills, and newer custom builds backing up to open ground with the Wasatch right behind them. Lindon's General Plan has historically protected agricultural and large-lot zoning along the bench, which is why you still see chicken coops, riding arenas, fruit trees, and detached shops on streets that are otherwise five minutes from a Costco and I-15.

Buyers shopping acreage here are usually weighing Lindon against Alpine, Highland, or Mapleton, and the trade-off is real: Lindon tends to price a touch lower than Alpine for similar lot sizes, keeps you closer to Silicon Slopes commuters in Lehi and Pleasant Grove, and feeds into the Alpine School District. Water rights are the detail to watch — many of the older acreage parcels carry shares in local irrigation companies, and that's a meaningful piece of the value if you want to keep pasture green through July and August. Lot sizes on the MLS range from roughly a third of an acre up to multi-acre estate parcels along the bench. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market in Lindon.

May 2026 · Lindon market

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

Full Lindon market report
Median sale
$639,072
6 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
3 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
100.6%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
31
active + pending

1 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About homes with acreage in Lindon.

What size lots qualify as 'acreage' in Lindon?

On the Lindon MLS, acreage searches typically start around a third of an acre and go up from there. True one-acre-plus parcels are mostly concentrated on the east bench above 800 East and along the older agricultural streets near Center Street and 200 South.

Can I keep horses or livestock on acreage in Lindon?

Yes, on properly zoned parcels. Lindon has agricultural and large-lot residential zones that allow horses, chickens, and small livestock, with the specific animal counts tied to lot size. Always verify the zoning designation and any HOA restrictions before writing an offer, especially on newer subdivisions that mimic acreage but restrict animals.

Do Lindon acreage properties come with water rights?

Many of the older bench properties carry shares in Lindon City irrigation or a private ditch company, which is what keeps pastures and orchards viable through the dry summer months. Water shares don't always transfer automatically with the deed, so the title work and seller disclosures need to spell out exactly what conveys.

How does Lindon acreage pricing compare to Alpine or Highland?

For comparable lot size and finish, Lindon generally runs somewhat below Alpine and Highland, partly because the lots are flatter and the addresses don't carry the same cachet. The flip side is shorter commutes to Silicon Slopes and Provo, plus easier access to I-15 at the Pleasant Grove interchange.

What school district serves Lindon?

Lindon is in the Alpine School District. Most acreage homes feed into Lindon Elementary, Oak Canyon Junior High, and Pleasant Grove High, though boundaries shift, so confirm the assignment for any specific address before relying on it.

Are there many acreage homes for sale in Lindon at any given time?

Inventory is thin. Lindon is a small city — under five square miles — and large-lot homes turn over slowly because owners tend to stay put. It's common to see only a handful of true acreage listings active at once, which is why setting up MLS alerts for new listings matters more here than in larger markets.