Horse Properties for Sale in Redmond, Utah
Redmond is a small ranching town in Sevier County, tucked between the Sevier River bottoms and the Pahvant Range about two and a half hours south of Salt Lake on I-15. It's best known statewide for Redmond Real Salt mining, but locally it has always been horse country — irrigated pasture, alfalfa fields, and gravel back roads that connect straight to BLM and forest service riding. Horse properties here tend to come with what buyers from the Wasatch Front struggle to find at the same price point: usable acreage, water shares, existing fencing, and a barn or loafing shed already in place. Expect parcels from one-acre in-town setups suitable for a couple of head, up to working operations of 20-plus acres with hay ground and corrals.
Pricing runs well below comparable equestrian land in Heber, Park City, or even Cedar City, which is why Redmond keeps drawing buyers who want real ranch utility without a luxury-market premium. The trade-off is rural distance: Richfield handles vet care, feed, and groceries 15 minutes south, and the closest hospital and commercial airport options are in Richfield and Cedar City respectively. Summers are warm and dry, winters bring cold nights and manageable snow at roughly 5,200 feet of elevation, and the riding season is genuinely long. Browse the active horse property listings below to see what's currently available, and reach out when you want acreage, water-right details, or outbuilding specs on a specific parcel.
May 2026 · Redmond market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Redmond right now.
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Common questions
About horse properties in Redmond.
How much acreage do horse properties in Redmond typically include? ▾
Most equestrian parcels in and around Redmond run from 1 to 10 acres, with larger working ranches of 20+ acres available on the outskirts toward Aurora and Salina. Smaller in-town lots often back to pasture or open land, which lets owners keep two or three horses without needing a full ranch operation.
Is water right ownership included with Redmond horse properties? ▾
It varies by parcel. Many properties along the Sevier River bottoms include shares in local irrigation companies like Redmond Irrigation or Sevier River water, which is essential for maintaining pasture through the dry summer. Always confirm the specific share count and delivery schedule in the seller disclosures before writing an offer.
What's the zoning situation for keeping horses in Redmond? ▾
Redmond sits in Sevier County with agricultural-friendly zoning across most of the area, and the town itself has a long ranching history that makes horse-keeping the norm rather than the exception. Properties inside city limits usually allow livestock on lots of an acre or more, but check the specific zoning designation since some newer subdivisions have tighter limits.
How far is Redmond from larger equestrian facilities and vet services? ▾
Redmond is about 15 minutes north of Richfield, where you'll find large-animal vets, feed stores, and the Sevier County Fairgrounds with its arena and event schedule. For bigger shows and auctions, Spanish Fork and the Utah State Fairpark in Salt Lake are roughly two hours north on I-15.
What's the riding terrain like around Redmond? ▾
Riders have direct access to BLM and Fishlake National Forest land within a short trailer ride, plus open desert riding toward the Pahvant Range to the west and the Sevier Plateau to the east. The Redmond salt flats and surrounding ranch country also give wide-open space for conditioning rides most of the year.
How does winter affect keeping horses in Redmond? ▾
Redmond sits at about 5,200 feet and gets cold winters with periodic snow, but accumulation is lighter than the Wasatch Back, so turnout is workable year-round with proper shelter. Most local properties include a barn or loafing shed, and frost-free hydrants on the pasture lines are common since temperatures regularly drop into the teens in January.