Horse Properties for Sale in Mona, Utah
Mona sits at the south end of Utah Valley, tucked between Mt. Nebo and Mona Reservoir, and it has quietly become one of the more practical places in the state to keep horses. Lot sizes here run larger than what you'll see in Spanish Fork or Salem, irrigation shares still trade with many parcels, and Juab County zoning is genuinely livestock-friendly rather than grudgingly tolerant. Most acreage properties sit on the flats west of I-15 or up against the foothills east of town, with pasture ground that actually grows grass thanks to Currant Creek and the Mona Irrigation Company system. Buyers coming from Highland, Alpine, or Draper are often surprised by how much land their budget covers once they cross the Utah/Juab county line.
The trade-off is commute and elevation. Mona sits around 4,900 feet, so winters bring real snow and summers stay cooler than St. George country — good for horses, harder on uncovered arenas in spring wind. Provo is about 35 minutes up I-15, Lehi's tech corridor closer to 50, and Nephi (groceries, feed store, vet) is 10 minutes south. Trail access into the Nebo Loop and West Mountain is essentially out the back gate. Acreage with a barn, loafing sheds, or a round pen already built tends to move quickly when priced right, while raw pasture parcels give buyers room to design their own setup. Browse the active equestrian listings below to see what's currently on the market in Mona and the surrounding Juab County area.
May 2026 · Mona market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Mona right now.
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Active listings
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Common questions
About horse properties in Mona.
How much land do most horse properties in Mona include? ▾
Listings in Mona typically run from 1 acre on the town lots up to 20+ acres on the benches and out toward Mona Reservoir. Five to ten acres is the sweet spot for buyers who want pasture, a small arena, and a few outbuildings without taking on a full hay operation. Larger parcels with water shares show up regularly along the foothills.
Does Mona allow horses on residential lots? ▾
Juab County and Mona's zoning are friendly to livestock, and most parcels outside the small downtown core allow horses by right. Lot size requirements vary by zone, so confirm animal unit counts with Juab County before writing an offer if you plan to keep multiple horses or board.
Is irrigation water available for pasture? ▾
Many Mona properties carry shares in the Mona Irrigation Company or pull from local ditches fed by Currant Creek and Mona Reservoir. Water shares are valuable here and don't always transfer automatically, so check the title commitment and ask the listing agent specifically which shares convey.
How close is Mona to trail riding and equestrian events? ▾
Mona sits at the south end of Utah Valley with direct access to the West Mountain and Mt. Nebo foothills for trail riding. Spanish Fork's equestrian park and the Utah County fairgrounds are about 25 minutes north, and the Juab County fairgrounds in Nephi are 10 minutes south.
What's the commute like from a Mona horse property? ▾
I-15 runs right past town. Provo is about 35 minutes north, Lehi tech corridor around 50 minutes, and Salt Lake City roughly an hour and 15. That commute is the main reason buyers pick Mona over closer-in horse towns where acreage now runs two to three times the price.
Do listings usually include barns and arenas already built? ▾
It's a mix. Some properties come with loafing sheds, tack rooms, and round pens already in place; others are raw pasture where you'd build to suit. Round pens and covered arenas tend to add real resale value in Mona because the wind off Mona Reservoir makes uncovered riding tough in spring.