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Live Clearfield listings, filtered

Clearfield homes under $700K.

The typical Clearfield home is valued right around $400,000 (Zillow ZHVI, Apr 2026), so under $700K is the top of the standard market: the most premium homes in Clearfield's established inventory, the best-finished resale stock in a compact, nearly built-out city, fed live from the MLS and priced high to low.

In a hurry? Skip to the listings or see how the price rungs trade.

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The local read


Under $700K is the top of the standard market.

Set the frame: with the typical Clearfield home valued right around $400,000 (Zillow ZHVI, Apr 2026), under $700K sits near the top of the standard market. Clearfield is a 7.75-square-mile grid that is nearly built out, so this bracket is not about bigger subdivisions or new phases; it is about the best examples of what the city has: the most extensively renovated homes, the largest and quietest lots, and the most premium attached construction.

What the budget reaches here is Clearfield's ceiling inventory. Executive-level renovations on mid-century and expansion-era detached homes, homes with complete interior overhauls and updated systems, on the most established interior streets. At the attached end, the top-tier units from the Clearfield Station district redevelopment. A custom touch, a designed kitchen, a finished lower level, an oversized garage, is common rather than exceptional at this number.

This is a patient, comp-driven bracket. Fewer homes trade here in Clearfield and fewer buyers compete, so the work is reading value carefully: what a renovation, a lot, or a location is actually worth, rather than racing a crowd. A standing pre-approval keeps you ready when the right one lists.

Comparing brackets? The under $600K page is the upper-mid market, and the over $700K page is the high end where Clearfield's most distinctive properties trade. The Clearfield guide sets the full market context, and reaching out gets a current read.

Stretch math

  • One rung up: over $700K is the high end of the Clearfield market: the city's most distinctive properties, with the premium finishes and best lots that the standard ladder does not reach. It runs on a slower, more patient clock.

  • One rung down: under $600K is the upper-mid bracket: fully renovated detached homes and premium attached near transit, with more inventory and a touch more competition than this page.

  • Either way: The bracket is a search filter, not a verdict. Share the must-haves and a local read will tell you which line they actually live on.

Typical home value (all of Clearfield)~$400,000Zillow ZHVI, Apr 2026, verify quarterly
What this page coversThe top of the standard marketLocal MLS, verify quarterly
Busiest competitionLate spring into summerLocal MLS pattern
How this works. Scott Buehler is licensed in both real estate and mortgage lending and may assist with financing across Utah; local representation in Clearfield comes through a partner agent. Every role is disclosed, and you are always free to choose your own agent and your own lender. More on How I Work.

What the money buys


Under $700K comes in three shapes.

Almost everything in this bracket is one of three kinds of home, and at the top of the standard market in Clearfield each leans toward renovation depth, lot quality, or premium attached construction. Knowing which you are after focuses a selective market.

Executive-level renovated homes

The most extensively updated homes in Clearfield's resale stock: mid-century and expansion-era ramblers and split-levels with comprehensive interior overhauls: designed kitchens, renovated baths, updated mechanical systems, and finished lower levels. On the city's quietest and most established interior streets.

The trade: an older build decade in exchange for a comprehensively renovated home on a settled, mature lot.

Largest established lots in the city

The biggest parcels Clearfield's nearly built-out grid offers: oversized lots in the established neighborhoods, sometimes with a workshop, an extended garage, or outbuildings. Land does part of the work here, and you cannot add more of it in a city this built out.

The trade: an older home or one that still needs updating in exchange for lot size and land that cannot be replicated inside city limits.

Top-tier attached homes near transit

The highest-end units from the Clearfield Station redevelopment and its adjacent new construction: the largest floor plans, the best finishes, and direct walkability to the FrontRunner stop and the emerging station-district amenities.

The trade: a shared wall in exchange for a new build, premium finishes, and the city's best transit-oriented location.

In a market this selective, any single week may show only a handful in each shape. The live grid below settles which is real right now.

Hold, stretch, or step down


How the rungs trade.

The bracket below and the high end above buy a different kind of home, not just a smaller or bigger version of this one. Here is the honest, list-price read on what changes when you cross a line. The middle column is this page.

How Clearfield homes compare across the under $600k, under $700k, and over $700k price brackets.
Comparison point Under $600K Under $700KThis page Over $700K
Typical home shape Fully remodeled detached, larger split-levels, premium attached near transit Executive-level renovations, largest established lots, top-tier attached near transit The most distinctive properties in Clearfield: the city's best finishes and rarest inventory
What you usually give up The deepest renovations and the city's largest lots The most budget in the standard ladder Patience, and the most budget in town
What you usually gain Comprehensive renovations, larger footprints, premium transit-adjacent options Executive renovations, the best lots, and top-tier attached construction The rarest properties: the deepest finishes and most distinctive inventory in the city
Where it tends to land you The interior blocks and the station district's premium end The most established interior streets and the top of the station district The city's most distinctive addresses, across all areas
How the competition feels Calmer, with fewer buyers competing Patient and comp-driven, the fewest rivals in the standard range The slowest, most selective end of the Clearfield market

The rung is a starting filter, not a verdict. The right one comes down to the must-haves driving the search. Share what those are and a local read will tell you which line to watch.

Priced high to low


The listings under $700K.

Fed straight from the local MLS and capped at $700,000: new Clearfield listings at the top of the standard market appear here as they list, and sold homes drop off. Use the on-grid filters to set your own floor and narrow by beds, baths, or type.

If the grid looks thin today, that is the real market, not a glitch: inventory in this bracket moves in waves and some weeks it genuinely runs lean. Tell us what you are after and the team will flag the next match as soon as it lists.

Listing information comes from the local MLS and is deemed reliable but not guaranteed.

A four-step play


How to move at the top of the standard market.

This bracket rewards patience and careful comp-reading over speed. With fewer homes and fewer buyers, the work is reading value and waiting for the right fit.

  1. Get pre-approved first

    A pre-approval letter anchors a serious offer at this level and signals you can close. Keep it current so you are ready when the right home lists.

  2. Pin the one thing you will not trade

    Renovation depth, lot size, or transit-proximity finish. At the top of the standard market in a nearly built-out city these rarely arrive together, so naming the non-negotiable keeps the search honest.

  3. Get on first-look alerts

    Fewer homes trade at this number in Clearfield, so the right one is worth catching early. First-look alerts mean you see it before it makes the rounds.

  4. Tour with a local read on the comps

    At this number, a careful comp read is the whole game: what a renovation, a lot, or a transit-district finish genuinely supports in Clearfield's resale market. Walk the buying process and the art of the offer whenever you want the full picture.

Scott Buehler, Moving Utah

Shopping the top of the standard market, where value rewards patience?

At this number in Clearfield you are buying renovation depth, lot quality, or a top-tier transit location, and a careful comp read is everything. Share the one non-negotiable and the local partner agent will flag the homes that deliver it.

Selling a Clearfield home under $700K? The buyers reading this page are searching for exactly what you have. List it with the local partner agent featured for Clearfield and it gets featured across MovingUtah, on the pages they are already reading. Referrals to a partner agent may involve a referral fee, always disclosed up front.

See how featuring works Start with your number

Quick answers


Under $700K in Clearfield, answered.

The top of the standard market in a nearly built-out city: executive-level renovated ramblers and split-levels with comprehensive interior overhauls, the largest established lots available inside city limits, and the top-tier attached units from the Clearfield Station redevelopment. A custom touch is common here. The mix shifts week to week, so let the live listings above settle which is real right now.

Well above. The typical Clearfield home is valued right around $400,000 (Zillow ZHVI, Apr 2026), so under $700K sits near the top of the standard market, where renovation quality, lot size, and transit-district location set the price.

Yes. The under $600K page is the upper-mid market, with fully renovated detached homes and premium attached near transit, with more inventory and a touch more competition than this page.

Longer than the mid-market, with fewer buyers competing and a patient, comp-driven pace. A standout renovated home or a top-tier transit-district unit can still move in season. This page sorts high to low by price so you catch the right one at the top.

Yes, and the selection can be strong. Executive-level renovated ramblers, the Utah word for single-story homes, are one of the defining shapes at this bracket. Many sit over a full finished basement, which means a staircase despite the one-story label. The single-story homes page filters for them.

A current pre-approval letter and a clear non-negotiable: renovation depth, lot size, or transit proximity. At the top of the standard market in Clearfield, patience and a careful comp read matter more than speed.