Tooele County, UT
Property Data

Explore accurate parcel and ownership records,
directly sourced from county assessors.

Total Properties

39,481

Average Home Price

Average Square Feet

Price per Sq Ft

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

Loading map...
Total Properties
27524,868

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

39,481

Median Home Price

Average Home Price

Average Square Feet

Price per Sq Ft

Recent Sales (12mo)

YoY Price Change

Sales Velocity

Tooele County, Utah: The Affordable Frontier Just West of the Wasatch

There's a reason young Utah families are crossing the Oquirrh Mountains. Tooele County — pronounced "too-WIL-ah" by locals — sits about 35 miles southwest of Salt Lake City, separated from the metro by a mountain range and, increasingly, a widening gap in home prices. While Salt Lake County median home values have surged past $500,000, Tooele offers a credible alternative at $391,300 — still above the national median, but representing real value for households earning a county-average of nearly $102,000 a year. That's a price-to-income ratio of roughly 3.8x, actually below the national benchmark of 4x. In today's housing market, that's genuinely rare.

The result is one of the highest homeownership rates you'll find anywhere in America: 82.6%, compared to a national rate hovering around 65%. With 80.5% of the housing stock consisting of single-family homes and a vacancy rate of just 4.5%, this is a county of homeowners, not renters — and that demand keeps supply tight.

A Young, Working County on the Move

The demographic profile here reads like a textbook for family formation. The median age is just 32, nearly six years below the national median. Nearly a third of residents — 31.5% — are under 18, and school enrollment sits at 31.9% of the total population. Households average 3.31 people, well above the national norm. Tooele isn't just attracting young families; it's producing them.

This youthfulness is matched by economic vitality. The poverty rate of 4.7% is strikingly low — about half the national average — and child poverty nearly mirrors it at 4.6%, a remarkable alignment suggesting broad household stability rather than a two-tier economy. Labor force participation at 71.7% runs ahead of most comparable rural counties.

The county's economic backbone includes Tooele Army Depot, one of the largest military storage installations in the country, alongside industrial operations tied to the West Desert's mining, chemical, and logistics sectors. That employer mix — stable government jobs plus blue-collar industry — helps explain the high incomes despite relatively modest educational attainment: just 15.3% hold a bachelor's degree, compared to 35% nationally.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Value$391,30022% above national median, but well below Utah's urban core
Homeownership Rate82.6%nearly 18 points above national average
Price-to-Income Ratio3.8xbelow the 4x national benchmark — genuinely affordable
Pop Under 1831.5%among the highest shares of any Utah county

FAQs

What makes Tooele County unique? Tooele is one of the last genuinely affordable bedroom communities within commuting range of a major American metro. Its combination of high homeownership, low poverty, large families, and below-benchmark affordability ratios is almost anomalous in the current housing landscape — sustained by a young workforce, military employment, and land availability that the hemmed-in Wasatch Front simply can't match.

Is Tooele County a good place to buy a home? For price-conscious buyers priced out of Salt Lake or Utah County, Tooele presents a compelling case. The price-to-income ratio favors ownership, vacancy is low (signaling stable demand), and the severe rent burden rate of 9.1% is modest — suggesting even renters aren't being crushed. The tradeoff is infrastructure: with a population density of just 11 people per square mile and 70.8% of workers driving alone, this is car-dependent living with long commutes.

Why is the limited English figure so high? At 23.4%, Tooele County's limited English rate is notably elevated for a rural Utah county and likely reflects Spanish-speaking households tied to agricultural, mining, and logistics labor in the region. Cross-referencing with the low poverty and SNAP rates suggests economic integration is proceeding — these are working households, not marginalized ones.

More Counties in Utah

Access Tooele County, UT Property Data Through Our Enterprise API

Get instant access to comprehensive county assessors-based property data with your free API key

Need Bulk Data?

Email us at hello@realie.ai