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Spanish Fork, Utah

Luxury Homes for Sale in Spanish Fork, Utah

Spanish Fork sits at the southern end of Utah Valley, roughly 60 miles south of Salt Lake City International Airport, where the Spanish Fork River bends toward the base of the Wasatch and the Uinta National Forest rises sharply to the east. The city has grown fast — crossing 40,000 residents in recent years — yet it has held onto a distinctly small-town, agricultural feel that separates it from the denser suburbs of Provo and Orem just to the north. Luxury buyers are drawn here precisely because the price-per-square-foot math still pencils out far better than comparable homes in Park City or the Cottonwood Heights corridor. In Spanish Fork, a high-end home in the $700,000–$1.2 million range can realistically deliver five or six bedrooms, a three-car garage, RV parking, main-floor primary suite, and sweeping views of either the Wasatch Range to the east or the broad Utah Valley basin stretching north toward Mount Timpanogos.

The highest-concentration of larger, newer luxury builds tends to cluster in the East Bench neighborhoods near Canyon Road, in the hillside communities south of the city center, and in master-planned subdivisions along the expanding southern fringe. Spanish Fork City schools are part of Nebo School District, one of Utah's larger districts, and the city is close to Spanish Fork Canyon — the main corridor to Strawberry Reservoir, a popular fishing and boating destination. Employers like the large Amazon fulfillment center in nearby Salem and the tech campuses of Utah County keep buyer demand steady even when broader markets soften. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market.

June 2026 · Spanish Fork market

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

Full Spanish Fork market report
Median sale
$599,000
37 closed in June 2026
Median DOM
5 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
99.7%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
289
active + pending

33 matching · page 2 of 2

Active listings

Common questions

About luxury homes in Spanish Fork.

What price range defines a luxury home in Spanish Fork?

Most agents here consider $900K the entry point for luxury, with the top of the market running $1.5M to $2.5M. That's noticeably lower than comparable homes in Alpine, Highland, or Draper, which is a big part of why Spanish Fork has been gaining ground with move-up buyers.

Which neighborhoods have the most high-end inventory?

The east bench above Canyon Road, Sierra Bonita, Palmyra, and the Spanish Oaks area near the golf course and reservoir hold most of the luxury homes. Acreage estates also show up south of town toward Salem and out by Spanish Fork Canyon.

Do luxury homes in Spanish Fork typically include acreage?

Many do. Half-acre to two-acre lots are common at this price point, and you'll see horse properties of 3-5+ acres on the outskirts. That land component is one of the main reasons buyers choose Spanish Fork over denser Utah County cities.

What's the commute like to Silicon Slopes and Salt Lake from Spanish Fork?

Lehi and the Silicon Slopes tech corridor run about 25-35 minutes up I-15 depending on time of day. Downtown Salt Lake is roughly 50-60 minutes, and the SLC airport is about an hour. Many luxury buyers here work in Utah County and only head north occasionally.

Are newer builds or established homes more common at the top of the market?

Newer construction dominates. Most luxury inventory in Spanish Fork was built in the last 10-15 years, with a lot of activity on the east bench since 2018. You'll find some custom estate remodels in older parts of town, but the bulk of high-end listings are modern builds with three-car garages, RV parking, and walkout basements.

What should buyers know about water and irrigation on larger Spanish Fork lots?

Many homes on acreage have secondary (pressurized irrigation) water through Strawberry Water Users or city shares, which keeps landscaping costs reasonable. Confirm share allocation and irrigation season (typically April through October) during due diligence, especially on horse properties or homes with pasture.