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Moroni, Utah

Homes with Solar Panels for Sale in Moroni, Utah

Moroni is a small Sanpete County town of about 1,400 people, tucked into the Sanpete Valley between Mt. Pleasant and Nephi at roughly 5,500 feet elevation. It's turkey country — Moroni Feed Company has anchored the local economy for decades — and the housing stock leans toward older farmhouses, rural acreage, and a growing mix of newer builds on larger lots. Solar makes real economic sense here for a few reasons: lot sizes are generous enough for unshaded south-facing roofs or ground-mount arrays, the high-desert climate delivers strong year-round sun, and rural power bills add up fast when you're heating with electric in January or running well pumps and outbuildings.

Buyers looking at solar-equipped homes in Moroni should pay close attention to which utility serves the address — Moroni City Power and Rocky Mountain Power both operate in the area, and their net metering and export credit rules differ meaningfully. Also worth confirming: whether the system is owned outright or on a lease/PPA, the age and warranty status of the panels and inverter, and whether battery storage is included (useful during the occasional rural outage). Inventory of solar homes in Moroni stays thin given the town's size, so options come and go quickly. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market, and reach out if you'd like production data or utility specifics on a particular property.

March 2026 · Moroni market

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

Full Moroni market report
Median sale
$490,000
4 closed in March 2026
Median DOM
33 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
97.6%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
7
active + pending

1 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About homes with solar panels in Moroni.

Does solar make sense in Moroni's climate?

Yes — Sanpete County averages around 230+ sunny days a year, and Moroni sits at roughly 5,500 feet, which actually improves panel efficiency since cooler ambient temps reduce heat losses. Winter production drops with snow cover, but spring through fall output is strong on south-facing roofs.

Who is the utility, and does net metering apply?

Most of Moroni is served by Moroni City's municipal power along with Rocky Mountain Power in surrounding areas. Net metering terms vary between the two, so check the specific account on any listing — municipal utilities often have different export credit rules than Rocky Mountain Power's customer self-supply program.

Are the solar panels usually owned or leased?

In rural Sanpete County, owned systems are far more common than third-party leases or PPAs. That matters at closing: an owned system transfers with the home and adds appraised value, while a lease requires the buyer to qualify and assume the contract.

How does solar affect the appraisal and loan?

Owned systems can add value on the appraisal if comparable solar sales exist nearby — which is still thin in Moroni, so appraisers sometimes pull comps from Ephraim, Mt. Pleasant, or Nephi. Leased systems are treated as personal property and don't add appraised value.

What should I ask the seller about the system?

Request the install date, manufacturer and warranty paperwork on panels and inverter, the original interconnection agreement with the utility, and 12 months of production and power bills. Also confirm whether any battery storage (Tesla Powerwall, Enphase, etc.) is included.

Do solar homes in Moroni sell at a premium?

There's typically a modest premium for owned systems, but Moroni's overall price point — generally lower than the Wasatch Front — means the dollar bump is smaller than what you'd see in Utah or Salt Lake County. The bigger win for most buyers here is the long-term power bill savings.