Homes with RV Parking for Sale in Lindon, Utah
Lindon sits in that sweet spot of Utah County where lot sizes still run generous, the foothills push right up against the backyards on the east bench, and zoning has stayed friendlier to recreational vehicles than in tighter neighbors like Orem and Pleasant Grove. That combination is why homes with RV parking show up here more often than you'd expect for a city of roughly 11,000 people. Buyers shopping Lindon tend to own toys — boats headed for Deer Creek or Utah Lake fifteen minutes away, side-by-sides loaded for the Uintas, fifth wheels for trips down to Lake Powell — and they need a property that can actually store them without a monthly bill at an off-site lot.
What "RV parking" means on a Lindon listing varies more than buyers realize. Some homes offer a simple gravel pad behind a 12-foot gate; others have full concrete pads with 50-amp hookups and dump cleanouts; the higher-end builds near the foothills include enclosed RV garages with 14-foot doors and 45-foot depths. Pay attention to gate width, overhead clearance (watch for power lines and tree limbs), turning radius from the street, and whether the access runs alongside the house or comes through a rear easement. Lindon City code allows residential RV storage with some setback and screening rules, so verify compliance before closing. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market, and reach out when you want measurements pulled on a specific property.
May 2026 · Lindon market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Lindon right now.
10 matching · page 1 of 1
Active listings
Prefer the map?
See all 10 homes with rv parking on a map
Pan around Lindon and refine by drawing your own boundary.
Common questions
About homes with rv parking in Lindon.
What counts as RV parking on a Lindon listing? ▾
Most Lindon agents flag a property as having RV parking when there's a dedicated concrete or gravel pad with gated side-yard access wide enough for a Class A motorhome or fifth wheel. Some homes go further with covered RV ports or fully enclosed RV garages — common in newer builds east of Geneva Road. Always confirm gate width (12+ feet is typical) and pad length against your rig before writing an offer.
Does Lindon City allow RVs to be parked on residential property? ▾
Yes, Lindon allows residents to park RVs, boats, and trailers on their own property, but there are rules about setbacks from the front property line and screening from neighbors. The city has historically been more RV-friendly than neighboring Orem, which is part of why buyers with toys gravitate here. Check the current Lindon City code or call the planning department before assuming a specific setup is compliant.
Which Lindon neighborhoods have the most homes with RV parking? ▾
The east-bench areas above 200 East and the older neighborhoods around Lindon Heights tend to have the larger lots that accommodate RV pads. Newer subdivisions near 700 North and the foothills sometimes include dedicated RV garages as a builder option. Lots under a quarter acre on the west side rarely have room for full-size RV access.
How much more do homes with RV parking cost in Lindon? ▾
A usable RV pad with gated access typically adds $15,000–$30,000 to comparable Lindon homes, while a true RV garage (14-foot door, 40+ feet deep) can add $75,000 or more. Premiums have stayed strong because Lindon buyers often own boats for Deer Creek and Utah Lake plus trailers for side-by-sides headed to the Uintas.
Can I build an RV pad or RV garage if a Lindon home doesn't already have one? ▾
Often yes, depending on lot width, existing fencing, and HOA rules if applicable. Side-yard access on the south or north of the house is the usual approach, and most builds require a city permit for the curb cut and any structure over a certain footprint. Budget $8,000–$15,000 for a basic concrete pad with a rolling gate.
Are HOAs in Lindon strict about RVs stored in driveways? ▾
It varies. Older Lindon neighborhoods generally have no HOA at all, which is a big draw for RV owners. Newer planned communities near 1600 North and along the Orem border do have HOAs, and some restrict RVs visible from the street — meaning the rig has to live behind a gate or inside a garage. Read the CC&Rs before committing.