Townhomes for Sale in South Jordan, Utah
South Jordan has become one of the Salt Lake Valley's most consistently in-demand suburbs, and townhomes here represent one of the more practical entry points into that market. Sitting roughly 18 miles south of downtown Salt Lake City and just minutes from the Mountain View Corridor, South Jordan gives residents fast access to both the city and the Wasatch Mountains without the price tag of closer-in neighborhoods like Sugar House or Millcreek. Townhomes in South Jordan typically range from the low $300,000s for older, smaller units to the mid-$500,000s for newer construction with two-car garages and finished basements—a wide enough band to serve first-time buyers, downsizers, and investors alike. Most communities are clustered around Daybreak, South Jordan's master-planned neighborhood on the west bench, where walkable streets, community pools, and Jordan Ridge elementary feed into the well-regarded Jordan School District.
Compared to a single-family detached home, a South Jordan townhome typically means lower maintenance (HOAs handle exterior upkeep and landscaping in most communities), shared walls on one or two sides, and a smaller lot—trade-offs many buyers are happy to make given the price difference, which can run $150,000–$200,000 less than a comparable detached home nearby. Most newer townhome builds here are three stories, with a ground-floor garage, main living area on the second floor, and bedrooms above. Quick access to the Bangerter Highway, Trax light rail at Daybreak, and the South Jordan Parkway shopping corridor makes the lifestyle genuinely convenient. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market.
June 2026 · South Jordan market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in South Jordan right now.
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Common questions
About townhomes for sale in South Jordan.
What's the typical price range for townhomes in South Jordan? ▾
Most South Jordan townhomes trade in the mid $400s to low $700s, depending on size, age, and whether they're inside Daybreak or in older Riverton-adjacent pockets near Bangerter. Newer Daybreak units with rooftop decks or lake access tend to push the upper end, while resale units from the early 2000s along 10400 South run lower.
Are most townhomes here in Daybreak? ▾
A large share of the active townhome inventory sits inside Daybreak — neighborhoods like SoDa Row, Garden Park, and Kennecott Shores all have heavy townhome density. Outside Daybreak, you'll see smaller pockets near The District, around 11400 South, and along the Mountain View Corridor.
Do South Jordan townhomes come with HOA fees, and what do they cover? ▾
Yes, nearly all of them. Daybreak HOA dues typically run $130–$180/month and cover front-yard landscaping, community pools, trails, the lake, and events. Non-Daybreak townhome HOAs vary more — some cover exterior maintenance and roofs, others just common areas, so read the docs carefully.
How's the commute to downtown Salt Lake or Silicon Slopes from a South Jordan townhome? ▾
Downtown SLC runs about 25–30 minutes via I-15, and Lehi/Silicon Slopes is roughly 15–20 minutes south on Bangerter or Mountain View Corridor. The Red Line TRAX stops at Daybreak Parkway, which is a real perk if you work near the U of U or downtown.
Which school district serves South Jordan townhomes? ▾
South Jordan is split between Jordan School District (east side, older parts of the city) and Canyons in a few edge cases, but the bulk of Daybreak feeds Jordan District — schools like Eastlake Elementary, Copper Mountain Middle, and Herriman or Bingham High depending on boundaries.
Are townhomes here a good option for first-time buyers? ▾
They're one of the more realistic entry points in the southwest valley. Compared to a detached home in South Jordan that often starts in the $600s, a townhome in the $450–$500 range gets first-time buyers into a strong school zone with newer construction and amenities they wouldn't get elsewhere.