Homes with Pools for Sale in Springville, Utah
Springville sits at roughly 4,600 feet elevation along the Wasatch Front, tucked between Provo and Spanish Fork at the foot of the Wasatch Range. Summers here are warm and dry — July and August highs regularly push into the low-to-mid 90s — which makes a private backyard pool genuinely usable for four solid months, sometimes stretching into late September on warm years. That's a meaningful window, especially for families with kids out of school, and it's why pool homes in Springville tend to carry a price premium of $40,000–$80,000 or more over comparable non-pool properties in the same neighborhood. The city's established neighborhoods like Oak Hills, Kolob, and the areas south of 400 South tend to have the larger lots where pools were installed during the subdivision boom of the 1980s–2000s, and many of those homes also back up to mountain views of the Wasatch peaks directly to the east.
Springville's water comes primarily from Utah Lake-area sources and the Spanish Fork River system, and the city has periodically implemented voluntary and mandatory conservation measures during drought years — something to factor into ongoing pool maintenance costs. Natural gas is widely available throughout the city, making gas pool heaters the dominant choice for extending the swim season into cooler shoulder months. Property taxes in Springville are relatively modest compared to Salt Lake County, and the Nebo School District serves the southern portion of the city while Alpine District covers the north — worth verifying by address if schools factor into your decision. Browse the active listings below to see what pool homes are currently available in Springville.
June 2026 · Springville market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Springville right now.
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Common questions
About homes with pools in Springville.
How long is the pool season in Springville? ▾
Realistic unheated swim season runs from early June through mid-September — about 12 to 14 weeks. With a natural-gas heater, most owners stretch that from mid-May into early October. Nighttime temperatures drop quickly in the fall once the canyon winds pick up, so a solar or thermal cover makes a noticeable difference.
What's the price premium for a pool in Springville? ▾
Expect to pay roughly $75,000 to $150,000 more than a comparable home without a pool, with the spread depending on whether the pool is heated, the quality of decking and fencing, and the age of the equipment. Pools under five years old with newer variable-speed pumps and saltwater systems sit at the top of that range.
Are there water restrictions that affect pool owners? ▾
Springville draws from a mix of culinary and secondary water sources, and the city has periodically asked residents to limit outdoor watering during drought years. Pool fill and top-off use is generally unrestricted, but lawn watering around the pool may be limited to certain days. Check current Springville City water guidance before closing.
Do most Springville pool homes have natural gas heaters or propane? ▾
Natural gas is standard in nearly all Springville neighborhoods, so gas heaters are the norm. Propane heaters show up occasionally on older properties east of the city near the canyon mouth where gas lines didn't historically reach. Electric heat pumps are rare here because of how cold the shoulder seasons get.
What fencing and safety rules apply to pools in Springville? ▾
Utah County and Springville City require pools deeper than 24 inches to be enclosed by a fence at least 48 inches tall with self-closing, self-latching gates. Pools installed after 2018 also typically need an alarm or safety cover. Always verify the existing pool was permitted — unpermitted pools can complicate insurance and resale.
How many pool homes are usually on the market in Springville? ▾
Inventory is thin. Springville typically has somewhere between 3 and 12 active listings with in-ground pools at any given time, with the most options appearing in spring and early summer. Setting up an instant MLS alert is the best way to catch new pool listings before they go under contract.