Horse Properties for Sale in Stansbury Park, Utah
Stansbury Park sits in Tooele Valley about 35 miles west of Salt Lake City, tucked between the Oquirrh Mountains and the south shore of the Great Salt Lake. The community itself was platted around a golf course and a chain of ponds, but the surrounding ground — Erda to the south, Lake Point to the north, and unincorporated Tooele County to the west — is where the horse acreage actually lives. Buyers looking at horse properties in this area are usually choosing between fully built-out parcels with barns, arenas, and pasture, and raw acreage where they can design their own setup. Lot sizes commonly run from 1 acre up to 5+ acres, with larger ranchettes available further out toward Grantsville.
Climate matters when you're keeping horses out here. Tooele Valley gets roughly 15 inches of precipitation a year, hot dry summers in the 90s, and winters that drop into the teens with manageable snow loads — easier on hay storage and footing than the high country east of SLC. Irrigation shares from Settlement Canyon or secondary water connections are often what separate a usable pasture from a dust lot, so check water rights carefully on any listing. Tooele County zoning also varies parcel by parcel, with most horse-friendly ground sitting in RR-1, RR-5, or A-20 designations. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market, and reach out when you want help comparing water rights, outbuildings, or commute trade-offs.
May 2026 · Stansbury Park market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Stansbury Park right now.
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Common questions
About horse properties in Stansbury Park.
Can I actually keep horses on residential lots in Stansbury Park? ▾
It depends on the lot. Stansbury Park itself is a planned community with HOA-governed parcels where livestock is restricted on the smaller interior lots, but properties on the south and west edges — and in the unincorporated Tooele County land just outside the SID boundary — routinely allow horses on parcels of roughly an acre or more. Always confirm with Tooele County Planning and the specific HOA, because rules shift block by block.
How much land do most horse properties around Stansbury Park sit on? ▾
Most listings that work for one or two horses run between 1 and 5 acres, with the larger spreads sitting closer to Erda, Lake Point, and the Stansbury foothills. A 1-acre lot typically supports one horse with a small turnout; if you want pasture rotation or multiple horses, look at 2.5 acres and up.
Is irrigation water available for pastures? ▾
Some parcels carry shares in Settlement Canyon Irrigation or Grantsville Irrigation, which makes keeping a green pasture through Tooele Valley's dry summers far more affordable than running culinary water. Water shares are listed separately on the MLS and are worth verifying before you write an offer — they can add real value or be the missing piece that makes a property workable.
How's the riding access from Stansbury Park? ▾
The Stansbury Mountains to the west and the foothills above Erda offer open BLM and forest access, and many owners trailer 10-15 minutes to trailheads at South Willow Canyon or ride directly from properties on the valley's west side. The flat valley floor also gives you miles of dirt-road riding between farms.
What do horse properties in this area typically cost? ▾
Pricing ranges widely based on acreage, improvements, and water. Bare-bones homes on 1 acre with basic fencing tend to start in the upper $500s, while updated homes on 5+ acres with barns, arenas, and irrigation shares commonly run $900K to $1.4M. Properties with indoor arenas are rare and price accordingly.
How far is the commute to Salt Lake City from a horse property out here? ▾
Stansbury Park sits about 35 miles west of downtown Salt Lake City via I-80, usually 35-45 minutes outside of rush hour. The Tooele Valley's growth has pushed morning eastbound traffic heavier in recent years, so test-drive your commute at 7 a.m. before committing.