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Mt Pleasant, Utah

5+ Bedroom Homes for Sale in Mt Pleasant, Utah

Mt Pleasant has long been one of the better spots in central Utah to find a genuinely large home without paying Wasatch Front prices. The town sits in Sanpete Valley at about 5,900 feet, surrounded by farm ground and backed by the Wasatch Plateau, and its historic core is full of late-1800s brick homes that were originally built for big pioneer families. That means five and six bedroom floor plans aren't a modern luxury add-on here — they're baked into the housing stock. Add in newer ranchers and custom builds on the east side of town, plus the occasional acreage property with a barn, and shoppers looking for room to spread out have real options most weeks.

The buyer pool for larger homes in Mt Pleasant tends to be families relocating from Utah County, remote workers wanting more square footage per dollar, multigenerational households, and parents tied to Wasatch Academy in the center of town. North Sanpete schools, quick access to US-89, and the surrounding hunting, ATV, and snowmobile country all factor in. Prices generally run well below comparable square footage in Spanish Fork or Payson, though acreage, water shares, and outbuilding quality drive a lot of the spread. Browse the active 5+ bedroom listings below to see what's currently on the market in Mt Pleasant, and reach out when you want details on water rights, heating costs, or how a specific home has been updated.

April 2026 · Mt Pleasant market

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

Full Mt Pleasant market report
Median sale
$399,000
6 closed in April 2026
Median DOM
30 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
99.3%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
40
active + pending

17 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About 5+ bedroom homes in Mt Pleasant.

What do larger 5+ bedroom homes typically cost in Mt Pleasant?

Most 5+ bedroom homes in Mt Pleasant land between the high $400Ks and $800K, depending on lot size, outbuildings, and whether the home sits in town or on acreage near the foothills. Older Victorians on Main Street's historic blocks can come in lower if they need updates, while newer builds on the east bench with mountain frontage push higher. Acreage and water shares move the number more than square footage does.

Are these usually older historic homes or newer construction?

Mt Pleasant has a strong stock of late-1800s pioneer-era homes — many of the big brick two-stories on State Street and the surrounding grid were originally built for large families and still carry five or six bedrooms. You'll also see ranchers and newer custom builds on the edges of town with finished basements that push the bedroom count up. Buyers should expect a real mix on any given week.

Do larger homes here usually sit on acreage?

Plenty do. Mt Pleasant's zoning and Sanpete County's agricultural roots mean it's common to find 5+ bedroom homes on a half-acre to several acres, often with irrigation rights, barns, or horse setups. If acreage matters, ask about culinary versus secondary water and whether shares transfer with the property.

What schools serve larger families moving to Mt Pleasant?

Mt Pleasant is part of the North Sanpete School District. Kids attend Mt Pleasant Elementary, North Sanpete Middle School in Moroni, and North Sanpete High School in Mt Pleasant itself. Wasatch Academy, the well-known private boarding and day school, is also right in town and draws families from across the country.

How long is the commute to the Wasatch Front?

Mt Pleasant sits about 100 miles south of Salt Lake City via US-89 and US-6 — roughly 1 hour 45 minutes to the south end of the Salt Lake Valley in normal conditions. Provo and Spanish Fork are closer, around an hour. Many buyers picking up larger homes here are remote workers, retirees, or families willing to trade commute for space and price.

Is heating a 5+ bedroom home expensive in Sanpete County?

Winters in Mt Pleasant are real — elevation is around 5,900 feet and overnight lows regularly drop into the teens or single digits. Larger homes with original single-pane windows or uninsulated additions can run high on natural gas. Ask for past utility bills, and check whether the home has been re-insulated, has a wood or pellet stove backup, or carries newer mechanicals.