New Construction Homes for Sale in Richmond, Utah
Richmond sits at the north end of Cache Valley, about 15 minutes from Logan and a straight shot up Highway 91 toward the Idaho border. New construction here looks different than it does along the Wasatch Front — lots are larger, most subdivisions back up to working farmland or pasture, and builders are still putting up single-family homes on quarter-acre to full-acre parcels rather than tight zero-lot-line product. Active builders in and around Richmond tend to be regional Cache Valley names (Visionary, Hamlet, Ence, plus smaller local GCs) building craftsman and modern farmhouse plans in the $450K–$750K range, with custom builds on view lots above the bench pushing higher. Expect 9-foot main-floor ceilings, unfinished basements as the standard option, and three-car garages built for snow gear and ATVs, not Teslas.
Climate matters when you're buying new here. Richmond gets real winters — single-digit nights, lake-effect snow off the Great Salt Lake, and a short building season that runs roughly April through October, so timelines slip. Most new homes are framed with 2x6 exterior walls, spray foam or blown-in insulation, and high-efficiency furnaces because heating bills are a real line item. Utah State University in Logan drives a chunk of the buyer pool, along with employees at Schreiber Foods, ICON Health & Fitness, and the growing ag-tech sector. Browse the active new-construction listings below to see what builders currently have under roof, what's still at the lot-reservation stage, and which spec homes are nearing completion.
June 2026 · Richmond market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Richmond right now.
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Common questions
About new construction homes in Richmond.
What's the price range for new construction in Richmond right now? ▾
Most new builds in Richmond fall between $450,000 and $750,000 for a finished main level on a standard lot, with unfinished basements adding square footage you can complete later. Custom homes on acreage or view lots above the bench can run $800K to well over $1M depending on finishes and outbuildings.
Which builders are active in Richmond and the surrounding Cache Valley? ▾
Visionary Homes, Hamlet Homes, and Ence Homes all have a presence in Cache Valley, along with several smaller local general contractors who build one-off custom homes on owner-supplied lots. Inventory in Richmond specifically is thinner than in Logan, Smithfield, or Hyrum, so it's worth tracking spec homes weekly.
Can I buy a lot and bring my own builder? ▾
Yes — many parcels in and around Richmond sell as raw lots or in small subdivisions where the developer doesn't require a tied builder. You'll want to confirm CC&Rs, septic vs. city sewer hookups, and whether the lot has culinary water and secondary irrigation shares before closing.
How long does a new build typically take in Richmond? ▾
Plan on 8 to 12 months from contract to keys for a standard production home, longer for custom. Cache Valley's building season is shorter than the Wasatch Front because excavation and foundation work get pushed by frozen ground from late November through March.
Are there HOAs in Richmond's newer subdivisions? ▾
Some of the newer cul-de-sac developments have light HOAs covering shared open space or architectural standards, but plenty of Richmond new construction sits on parcels with no HOA at all — especially anything on a half-acre or larger. Read the plat and CC&Rs carefully if outbuildings, RVs, or livestock matter to you.
Does Richmond have room to keep growing? ▾
Richmond is small — under 3,000 residents — and surrounded by productive farmland, so growth is steady but not explosive. The city has been annexing parcels along the south and west edges where infrastructure can reach, which is where most current new construction activity is concentrated.