Homes with RV Parking for Sale in West Bountiful, Utah
West Bountiful sits at the north end of Davis County, about 15 minutes from downtown Salt Lake and 20 minutes from the SLC airport, which makes it a practical home base for anyone who hauls a travel trailer to Bear Lake, a boat to Pineview, or a side-by-side down to Sand Hollow. The city's larger lot sizes — many properties along 800 West, Pages Lane, and the older agricultural blocks west of Highway 89 sit on a quarter acre or more — are part of why RV parking is genuinely common here, more so than in tighter Bountiful or North Salt Lake subdivisions to the south. Buyers shopping this category are usually looking for a dedicated concrete or gravel pad on the side of the house with a gate wide enough for a fifth-wheel or Class A motorhome, not just a spot to tuck a small camper.
Zoning matters in West Bountiful, and the city has specific rules about where an RV can be parked, setback distances from the front property line, and screening requirements, so it's worth confirming a property's setup matches how you actually plan to store the rig. Homes with proper RV access typically run a modest premium over comparable houses without it, and the feature tends to move quickly in spring when families are pulling trailers out of paid storage lots in Woods Cross and Centerville. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market.
June 2026 · West Bountiful market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in West Bountiful right now.
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Active listings
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Common questions
About homes with rv parking in West Bountiful.
How common are homes with RV parking in West Bountiful? ▾
More common here than in most of Davis County. West Bountiful's larger lots — especially on the older streets west of Highway 89 — were laid out before suburban-style narrow lots took over, so side yards wide enough for a trailer gate are a regular feature rather than a rarity.
Does West Bountiful have rules about parking an RV at your house? ▾
Yes. The city regulates where RVs can sit (generally side or rear yard, not the front), setback from the property line, and surface type. Rules change occasionally, so check the current West Bountiful municipal code or call city hall before assuming a listing's pad is compliant.
What kind of RV parking should I look for in a listing? ▾
Key things: gate width (12 feet minimum for most fifth-wheels, more for slide-outs), pad surface (concrete holds up better than gravel under heavy rigs), overhead clearance if there are trees or power lines, and whether there's a 30/50-amp hookup and a sewer cleanout nearby. Photos rarely show all of this, so plan to verify in person.
Is a covered RV port allowed? ▾
Covered structures are allowed but require a building permit and have to meet setback and height limits. Some West Bountiful homes already have an existing RV cover or detached shop with tall doors — those are worth flagging because replicating one from scratch isn't cheap.
Do homes with RV parking sell for more in West Bountiful? ▾
Usually yes, though the premium varies. A simple gated gravel pad might add a few thousand in perceived value, while a finished concrete pad with hookups or an enclosed RV garage can add significantly more — sometimes $30,000 or more depending on the build quality.
Can I add RV parking to a home that doesn't have it? ▾
Often, but it depends on lot width, fence placement, and where utilities run. West Bountiful's wider lots make retrofits more feasible than in places like Bountiful proper. Budget for a gate, pad pour, and possibly relocating sprinklers or a section of fence — and confirm with the city before pouring concrete.