Homes with Solar Panels for Sale in Stansbury Park, Utah
Stansbury Park sits on the west side of the Oquirrh Mountains about 35 minutes from downtown Salt Lake and 40 minutes from the SLC airport, and it gets a lot of direct sun — long summer days, open sky, and roof orientations on many of the newer subdivisions that line up well for photovoltaic production. Homes with solar panels here tend to be in the newer pockets around Stansbury Lake, Village, and Lakeside, where builders offered solar packages during construction or where homeowners added systems after move-in. With Rocky Mountain Power as the local utility and net metering still in play (under the current export credit structure), an owned system on a 2,500-square-foot home can meaningfully cut summer cooling bills, which matter in a valley that regularly hits the mid-90s in July.
That said, solar in Stansbury Park is a mixed bag worth reading carefully. Some listings come with fully paid-off systems that transfer free and clear — those are the ones to focus on. Others carry leased panels or PPAs from national installers, and the lease terms, buyout figures, and lender approval steps need attention before you write an offer. Panel age, inverter warranty, and roof condition underneath the array also matter, especially on homes installed seven or more years ago. Browse the active Stansbury Park listings with solar below to see what's currently on the market, and ask your agent to pull the system details on anything that catches your eye.
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 homes with solar panels in Stansbury Park.
Are solar panels common on Stansbury Park homes? ▾
They're more common than you'd think for a Tooele County community of this size. Newer builds in Village, Lakeside, and the areas around Stansbury Lake often went up with rooftop solar during the 2018-2022 boom when Rocky Mountain Power's net metering terms were more generous. Resale inventory with existing systems shows up regularly on the MLS.
Is the system usually owned or leased? ▾
Both exist out here. Owned systems (cash purchase or paid-off loan) transfer cleanly with the home and add appraised value. Leased systems or PPAs from companies like Sunrun or Vivint require the buyer to qualify and assume the contract at closing — always read the lease terms before writing an offer.
How does Stansbury Park's climate affect solar production? ▾
The Tooele Valley averages around 230+ sunny days a year with strong summer output, though winter inversions and occasional snow cover on panels can dip January and February production. Most homeowners here see meaningful offsets on their Rocky Mountain Power bill, especially homes with south or west-facing roof planes.
What questions should I ask the seller about the panels? ▾
Ask for the install date, system size in kW, the inverter brand and warranty status, recent production data (most systems have an app), and whether the roof underneath has been inspected recently. If it's leased, request the full contract and the buyout figure.
Does solar add resale value in Stansbury Park? ▾
Owned systems typically appraise into the value, particularly on homes priced in the $500K-$700K range where buyers are watching monthly costs. Leased systems are more neutral — they don't usually add appraised value and can occasionally complicate financing if the lease terms aren't lender-friendly.
Will my mortgage lender care about the solar setup? ▾
Yes, especially with FHA, VA, and conventional loans. Owned systems are straightforward. Leased panels require the lease to be subordinated to the mortgage, and UCC filings against the property need to be reviewed. A good local lender familiar with Tooele County transactions can flag issues early.