Get App

Lindon, Utah

Homes with Pools for Sale in Lindon, Utah

Lindon is one of the smaller Utah County cities tucked between Pleasant Grove and Orem, with the Wasatch rising sharply to the east and Utah Lake stretching out to the west. It's a city built on larger lots than most of the valley — the old orchard and farm parcels never got fully subdivided, so half-acre and acre lots still show up regularly, especially east of State Street. That lot size is exactly why pool homes exist here at all: in tighter cities like Orem proper, there's rarely room. In Lindon, families building custom homes on the bench often put in a pool, a sport court, and a detached shop on the same parcel.

Summer in Lindon runs hot and dry — daytime highs sit in the low 90s from late June through August with very low humidity, which makes pool weather genuinely comfortable from Memorial Day through Labor Day. Winters shut things down between November and March, so most owners run a safety cover and a gas heater for shoulder-season use. Buyers looking at pool properties here should pay attention to whether the pool is on culinary or secondary water, the age of the equipment (pumps and heaters typically last 8–12 years), and how the lot drains during spring runoff off the mountain. Browse the active Lindon pool listings below to see what's currently available.

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 pools in Lindon.

Is a backyard pool worth it in Lindon's climate?

Lindon sits at about 4,600 feet on the Utah Valley bench, so the realistic swim season runs roughly mid-May through mid-September — about four solid months. Owners who add a heater and a safety cover often stretch that into October. If you want true year-round swimming, an indoor pool or a heated spa paired with the pool is the route most Lindon homeowners take.

How many homes with pools are typically on the market in Lindon?

Lindon is a small city of around 11,000 people, so pool inventory is thin — usually just a handful of active listings at any given time, sometimes only one or two. Most pools here are on larger half-acre-plus lots east of State Street or up toward the foothills. Setting up a saved search is the best way to catch new ones quickly.

What's the price premium for a pool in Lindon?

Expect a pool home to run roughly $50,000 to $100,000 above a comparable home without one, though the gap varies with lot size, whether the pool is in-ground or above, and whether there's a pool house or covered patio. Newer builds in the foothills with custom pools can push well past that range. Pools rarely return 100% of install cost at resale, but in Lindon they do widen the buyer pool because supply is so limited.

Are there water restrictions that affect filling or topping off a pool?

Utah County has been under varying levels of drought response for several years, and Lindon follows state and county guidance on outdoor watering. Initial pool fills generally aren't restricted, but secondary water schedules and lawn watering windows do tighten in dry summers. Most pool owners use auto-fill lines tied to culinary water and a cover to cut evaporation.

Gas or electric heat — what's standard around Lindon?

Natural gas heaters are the norm here because Dominion Energy service is available throughout the city and gas is cheaper to run than electric resistance heat for a pool this far north. Heat pumps work well on the shoulder seasons but lose efficiency once nighttime temps drop into the 40s, which happens early in the fall along the Wasatch.

Which Lindon neighborhoods have the most pool homes?

Pools cluster in the east-bench areas above 800 East — think the foothill streets near Lindon Hollow and the larger-lot subdivisions backing up to the mountain. You'll also find them on older horse-property lots along Center Street and 400 North where original owners had room to build out. Newer high-end pool builds tend to show up in the custom-home pockets near Murdock Canal Trail.