Living in Ogden Utah — Real Estate, Schools, Neighborhoods 2026
Randall Gorham · Utah Life Real Estate
Northern Utah/ Weber County/ Ogden, UT 84401 / 84403
Weber County · City Guide

Ogden
Utah

Utah's outdoor recreation capital. Historic 25th Street, Ogden Canyon 3 miles out, and Weber State University in the city.

Ogden is the urban heart of Northern Utah — 87,000 residents anchored by a genuinely revitalized historic downtown, the Ogden Canyon gateway to Snowbasin, Powder Mountain and Nordic Valley ski resorts, Weber State University in the city proper, and the lowest median home prices of any Wasatch Front city of comparable size. The city that rewards buyers willing to look past the brand and evaluate the actual fundamentals.

~87,000Population
4,300 ftElevation
84401 / 84403ZIP Code
Powder Mountain: 35 min · Snowbasin: 35 min · SLC: 40 min via I-15
Ogden Market Snapshot · 2026
Median Sale Price~$340,000
Price Per Sq Ft~$165
Avg. Days on Market20–38 days
List-to-Sale Ratio96–100%
1-Year Appreciation+4.2%
Active Listings (avg.)80–150 homes
Absorption Rate~2.2 months
Market ConditionBalanced Market
Lowest Price · Highest Appreciation · Most Inventory
About Ogden

Weber County — Ogden
Utah's outdoor recreation capital. Historic 25th Str

Ogden is Northern Utah's most complex and most underpriced real estate market. At $340K median — the lowest of any significant Wasatch Front city — Ogden delivers urban character, genuine walkability, mountain access, and a university campus that most comparable-price markets cannot provide. The city's recent investment in its historic downtown has produced a 25th Street district that now hosts nationally recognized restaurants, independent retail, a performing arts center, and a live music venue circuit that generates weekend destination traffic from across the region.

The outdoor recreation case for Ogden is straightforward and powerful: Ogden Canyon begins 3 miles from downtown, leading to Pineview Reservoir, Snowbasin Ski Resort (35 min), Nordic Valley (30 min), and Powder Mountain (40 min) — three distinct ski areas within a single reasonable drive. The Ogden River Parkway runs 3.5 miles through the city's core. The Bonneville Shoreline Trail is accessible from east bench neighborhoods. Ogden has been consistently ranked among the country's top outdoor recreation cities by national media. The commute calculator shows 40–45 minutes to downtown SLC — longer than Davis County but increasingly offset by Ogden's own growing employment base.

The investment case is the highest-potential in Northern Utah: +4.2% annual appreciation from the lowest price base on the Wasatch Front, a gentrification trajectory in the historic core that has been consistent for a decade, Weber State University's 30,000-student enrollment producing rental demand, and Hill AFB 15 minutes south. The Ogden School District serves the city (separate from Weber SD); families should understand that school quality varies significantly by zone and some Ogden neighborhoods fall within school boundaries that require research. Use our investment property analyzer for property-specific returns.

Ogden City Official Website — City of Ogden — parks, recreation, development services, community events, Historic 25th Street information, and municipal resources.
Visit Site ↗
Real Estate Overview

Price Ranges by
Ogden Neighborhood Zone

Historic Downtown / 25th Street corridor$310K–$450K
Gentrifying · walkable · loft conversions · oldest stock · investor-grade
East Bench / Washington Blvd corridor$350K–$520K
Best Ogden residential · 1950s–2000s · mountain views · WSU proximity
Central Ogden residential$290K–$380K
Most active volume · 1940s–1980s · mixed condition · first-time buyer primary
North Ogden / Harrisville border$340K–$430K
Established north corridor · transitioning to suburban character · better schools
Ogden Buy-and-Hold Snapshot
+4.2%YoY Appreciation
~2.5%Vacancy Rate
5.0–6.5%Cap Rate Range
Ogden Neighborhoods

Where to Buy in Ogden —
Distinct Market Zones

Use our neighborhood matching quiz to see which zone aligns with your commute, budget, and lifestyle priorities.

Historic 25th Street / Downtown
$310K–$450K
Ogden's most revitalized neighborhood runs along 25th Street between Washington Boulevard and Wall Avenue — a corridor of restored Victorian and early 20th century commercial buildings that now houses the city's best dining, craft beverage scene, live music venues, and independent retail. Residential conversions and new mixed-use development flank the district. The cap rates on cash-flowing rentals in the 25th Street zone (5.5–6.5%) are driven by WSU student proximity and the growing young-professional rental market drawn to walkable urban Ogden. The historic core is the front edge of the gentrification wave — buyers who purchase here accept more risk for more potential reward than any other Northern Utah market.
GentrifyingWalk score leaderWSU rental demand
East Bench / WSU Zone
$350K–$520K
Ogden's most desirable residential tier runs along the east bench above Washington Boulevard — neighborhoods where the Wasatch Range rises immediately overhead and Weber State University's campus creates employment, cultural, and residential demand. The east bench zone produces the most reliable Ogden comparable sales data and the best primary residence quality in the city. Days on market on well-priced east bench properties runs 16–24 days — faster than the city average. WSU rental demand keeps vacancy below 2% in this zone, and faculty/staff purchaser demand sustains year-round market activity that many Ogden neighborhoods don't experience.
WSU proximityBest Ogden residentialLow vacancy
Central Ogden Residential
$290K–$380K
The highest-volume transaction zone in Ogden — central residential neighborhoods built 1940–1980 that offer the city's broadest range of prices, lot sizes, and home conditions. First-time buyers using FHA financing find Ogden's most accessible entry points here: $290K–$340K FHA purchases with 3.5% down require $10,150–$11,900 down payment — well below any Davis County equivalent. The condition variance in this zone is significant: fully renovated 1950s homes trade next to unrenovated neighbors needing $30K–$60K of work. Separating the two when running comparable sales is essential for accurate pricing. See our down payment guide.
Lowest entry priceFHA-primaryCondition-variable
North Ogden / Harrisville Transition
$340K–$430K
The north Ogden neighborhoods approaching the Harrisville city boundary deliver a more suburban character than central or historic Ogden — wider streets, more consistent lot sizes, less character variance, and a transitional quality that bridges urban Ogden with the quieter north Weber communities. The school assignment in this zone may fall within Weber SD rather than Ogden City SD depending on specific address — verify directly before purchase if school district matters. Buyers who want Ogden prices with north-Weber suburban character find this transition zone the practical sweet spot.
Suburban transitionSchool district variesValue buying
Market Data and Real Estate Terms

Ogden's Market —
What the Numbers Mean for Buyers

Ogden's +4.2% annual appreciation is the highest of any Wasatch Front city with inventory over 50 homes — driven by the consistent gentrification of the historic core, WSU enrollment growth, and the outdoor recreation premium that continues to attract remote-work buyers from more expensive western markets. At a median of $340K, even 4.2% appreciation delivers $14,280 in annual equity gains — competitive with Davis County in absolute dollar terms while requiring 30–35% less capital to enter the market.

The balanced market (2.2 months absorption) reflects Ogden's higher inventory relative to demand — the city has 80–150 active listings on average, giving buyers more options and more negotiating room than any Davis County market. This is a feature for buyers who want to evaluate multiple properties and negotiate thoughtfully rather than competing blind in multiple-offer situations. The list-to-sale ratio of 96–100% means well-priced properties sell near asking; overpriced listings sit and become negotiable.

For investors, Ogden's cap rates of 5.0–6.5% in the historic core and central zones are the highest on the Northern Utah Wasatch Front. WSU's 30,000-student enrollment produces structural rental demand that makes Ogden a true university rental market — tenant sourcing is reliable and vacancy rates in the east bench and 25th Street zone stay below 2.5% through normal economic cycles. Use our investment analyzer to model specific addresses.

Median Sale Price
~$340,000
Current Ogden median. Weber County avg ~$400K.
Days on Market
20–38 days
Avg. list-to-contract. Varies by zone and season.
Absorption Rate
~2.2 months
Months of supply. Under 2.0 = seller advantage.
List-to-Sale Ratio
96–100%
Sale price as % of list. Over 100% = sold above asking.
Appreciation Rate
+4.2%
Year-over-year median price change.
Price Per Sq Ft
~$165
Ogden average. Varies by zone, age, and condition.
Financing — Active Loan Types in Ogden
Conventional
Up to $806,500
Most common. 20% down = no PMI. Dominant for move-up buyers.
FHA
Up to $524,225
3.5% down. First-time buyers. DPA programs available.
VA Loan
No limit · Zero down
Veterans. Hill AFB proximity keeps VA active across Weber Co.
Jumbo
$806,500+
For premium properties. 10–20% down typically required.
Education

Schools Serving
Ogden

Always verify your specific address school assignments directly with the school district before purchase.

City School District
Ogden City School District
Ogden is served by its own school district — Ogden City School District — which is separate from Weber SD. The district serves approximately 12,000 students across the city. School quality varies significantly by zone and school; the east bench schools generally perform above the district average. Families should research specific school assignments and performance data carefully. Ben Lomond High School and Ogden High School are the primary high schools. Verify your address assignment at the district level.
K–12 · City District
High Schools
Ogden High and Ben Lomond High
Ogden High School (1300 W, central Ogden) serves the west side; Ben Lomond High School serves the north. Both are 6A classifications with comprehensive programs. Ogden High's historic building is one of Utah's most architecturally significant school campuses. Academic performance varies; AP course availability at both schools is growing. Verify your address assignment with Ogden City SD directly.
Grades 9–12 · 6A
Higher Education — On Campus
Weber State University
Weber State University's main campus sits on Ogden's east bench — a full-service regional university with 30,000 students, programs in business, nursing, education, engineering, and the arts. WSU's campus creates an employment base, cultural programming, and rental demand that directly impacts the east bench real estate market. The university's growth trajectory has been consistently upward for two decades.
University — in city
Charter and Alternative
Multiple Charter Options
Ogden has more charter school options than any other Northern Utah city — several K–8 and K–12 charter schools operate within city limits, providing alternatives to the Ogden City SD neighborhood schools. Charter performance varies but some charters consistently outperform district averages. Application processes and lottery systems apply. Research charter options specific to your address zone.
Charter Options
Commute and Transportation

Getting From Ogden
to Where You Need to Be

Use our Northern Utah commute calculator to compare Ogden against all Weber County cities for your specific employer destination.

Destination
Drive Time
Route / Notes
Weber State University
5–12 min
Within city — east bench locations closest
Hill AFB Main Gate
15–22 min
I-15 S to Layton/Clearfield exits
Layton commercial corridor
14–20 min
I-15 S or US-89
Salt Lake City (downtown)
40–50 min
I-15 S — Wasatch Front's longest major commute
Snowbasin Ski Resort
30–38 min
I-84 E to SR-167 / Ogden Canyon
Powder Mountain / Nordic Valley
38–48 min
SR-39 E — Ogden Valley
FrontRunner (Ogden Station)
5–10 min
Downtown station — SLC in 45 min, Provo in 80 min
Local Highlights

What Ogden
Offers Day-to-Day

The Union Station complex anchors downtown Ogden's renaissance — a Spanish Renaissance Revival landmark that houses two museums (Natural History and Browning Firearms), a restaurant, and event space. The Eccles Theater and Peery's Egyptian Theater provide performing arts venues that draw programming from across the state. The Ogden Amphitheater hosts summer outdoor concerts. The 25th Street historic district — listed on the National Register of Historic Places — has been consistently ranked among the Mountain West's top urban revitalization stories.

Ogden Canyon begins at the city's eastern edge — a 10-mile canyon drive leading to Pineview Reservoir's boating and fishing, then splitting toward Snowbasin (Utah's most consistently underrated ski resort — 3,000 acres, uncrowded, world-class terrain), Nordic Valley (affordable, family-oriented, great for beginners), and Powder Mountain (the largest ski resort by acreage in the US). For buyers who ski, Ogden's canyon access is the most compelling ski-proximity argument in Northern Utah — closer to more resorts than Park City, Draper, or any other significant Wasatch Front market.

25th Street Historic DistrictUnion Station Museum complexOgden Canyon — 3 milesSnowbasin Ski Resort — 35 minPowder Mountain — 40 minNordic Valley — 30 minWeber State University — in cityFrontRunner Ogden StationOgden River Parkway — 3.5 milesEccles Center performing arts
Buyer Questions

Frequently Asked Questions
About Buying in Ogden

Is Ogden safe? I keep hearing mixed things.
Ogden is a city of neighborhoods — safety varies dramatically by zone. The east bench, WSU corridor, and the now-established 25th Street area have crime rates comparable to suburban Wasatch Front communities. Central and west Ogden have historically elevated property and violent crime rates relative to Davis County suburbs. The practical advice: visit the specific neighborhood during different times of day, review the Ogden City crime map (available online), and focus on the specific street-level environment rather than city-wide averages. Buyers who do this research consistently find that the east bench and adjacent corridors are safe, desirable, and dramatically underpriced relative to Davis County equivalents.
How does Ogden City School District compare to Davis and Weber SD?
Ogden City School District performs below Davis SD on most academic measures — the district's demographic profile (higher poverty rates, more English Language Learner students) creates different structural challenges than suburban districts face. The east bench schools and charter options within Ogden's boundaries perform significantly better than the district average. For families prioritizing school district quality above all else, Davis County remains the stronger choice. For families willing to research specific schools, pursue charter options, or who don't have school-age children, Ogden's price discount is substantial.
Is the outdoor recreation access from Ogden actually that good?
Yes — and it's arguably the most undervalued outdoor access story on the Wasatch Front. Three ski resorts within 35–48 minutes, Pineview Reservoir for summer boating and fishing 25 minutes east, the Bonneville Shoreline Trail accessible from the east bench, the Ogden River Parkway running through the city, and the Ogden Nature Center. Buyers who move to Ogden specifically for outdoor access and live on the east bench consistently report that the combination of proximity and lower housing costs makes Ogden the best outdoor lifestyle value in Northern Utah. Use our California vs Utah comparison if you're relocating.
What is the investment outlook for Ogden's historic district?
The historic 25th Street corridor has been in active gentrification for approximately 15 years with consistent forward momentum. The investment thesis is: purchase at current below-market prices, rent to WSU students or young professionals at yields that no Davis County market can produce, and hold for appreciation as the gentrification wave continues. The risk is gentrification pace — the process has been slower than optimistic projections in the mid-2000s predicted. Buyers who need returns within 3–5 years carry more risk than 10-year holders. The investment analyzer models both short and long hold scenarios.
What are the FrontRunner commute options from Ogden?
The Ogden FrontRunner station is downtown, making rail commuting to Salt Lake City (45 min), Provo (80 min), and all intermediate stations practical from central and east bench Ogden neighborhoods. FrontRunner service from Ogden runs frequently during peak commute hours. For SLC-bound workers, the 45-minute rail ride is comparable to driving on I-15 in peak traffic. Weber State University is directly accessible from the Ogden station by local transit. FrontRunner eliminates a meaningful portion of Ogden's SLC commute disadvantage for workers whose offices are near downtown SLC, the Intermodal Hub, or Murray.
What closing costs apply in Ogden?
Weber County's effective property tax rate is approximately 0.60% of assessed value — slightly above Davis County's 0.56% but still below Salt Lake County. On a $340,000 Ogden home, property taxes run approximately $2,040/year. Closing costs of 2–3% ($6,800–$10,200) apply. Use our mortgage calculator for full monthly PITI estimates at Ogden price points, and our closing cost guide for pre-closing budget planning.
Explore Weber County

Also in Weber County

Compare Ogden against every Weber County city — or return to the full Weber County guide for side-by-side data on all 13 communities.

Randall Gorham · Ogden Utah Specialist

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