Live Santa Clara listings, filtered
Accessible single-level homes in Santa Clara.
Santa Clara homes listed with accessible features, from step-free entries to single-level floor plans, pulled straight from the MLS and sorted newest first, with a local read on the features and what a red-rock lot means for a level approach.
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- Accessible / step-free
- Area
- Santa Clara, UT
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- Newest first
- Feed
- Local MLS, live
Want it narrower? Tell me your exact spec.
Newest first
The newest single-level access listings.
Fed straight from the local MLS and filtered to homes listed with accessible features: new Santa Clara listings appear here as they list, and sold homes drop off. The local read on which features matter most, why the lot grade matters here, and why every one of them gets verified in person, is just below.
See every listing on the map
The full Santa Clara inventory with the map, list view, and search filters. No account needed to look.
Hear about new matches first
Tell me what you are after and I will flag new listings that fit, usually the morning they go live.
This filter too narrow?
Browse every Santa Clara listing, or slide sideways: single story, two story, mountain view.
If the grid looks thin today, that is the real market, not a glitch: a specific set of accessible features is a narrow filter, so this set genuinely runs lean some weeks. Tell me the exact features you need and I will flag the next match as soon as it lists.
Listing information comes from the local MLS and is deemed reliable but not guaranteed.
The local read
What an accessible home means in Santa Clara.
On this page accessible means specific physical features of the home, things like a step-free entry, wider doorways and halls, a curbless or roll-in shower, and the whole floor plan on a single level. I keep it to the property on purpose. The job here is to describe what is actually built into the house, so you can decide whether the features fit what you are looking for, and so we can verify each one rather than guess from a listing photo.
The most useful thing to understand in Santa Clara is the gap between two words that get used as if they mean the same thing. Single-level living is realistically findable here: this is a warm desert town built largely on slab, so one-level ramblers, both custom and production, are common. Truly step-free is the smaller subset, a home with a no-step entry, wide passages, and a curbless shower, not just everything on one floor. That is why I usually run this search next to the single-story homes, and then confirm the step-free details on each one rather than assuming a rambler has them.
Here is the caveat that is specific to this town, and it is about the land more than the house. Much of the character inventory sits on red-rock and hillside grade near Snow Canyon and along the Santa Clara River bluffs, where the slope is the drama and a good part of the appeal. On those lots a level, no-step approach from the driveway to the door takes more looking than it does on the flatter valley-floor streets and the older central grid. The desert upside is real, though: there is no snow or ice to manage, so the entry question is grade and a shaded level path, not a winter one. New construction is where a step-free entry and wider doorways are easiest to get designed in from the start.
Here is the honest caveat that runs through everything on this page. The accessible features listed on any home come from what the listing agent entered, and those details are not guaranteed to be accurate or complete. A photo can make a shower look curbless when there is a lip, or a doorway look wide when it is standard. So treat the listing as a lead and confirm every feature in person with real measurements. Earlier in the process than "show me listings"? Start with the Santa Clara guide or the communities index. When a home below reads right, that is the moment to call.
Accessible features to read for
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Single-level floor plan: the whole home on one floor with no interior stairs. Common in this slab market, and the foundation most other accessible features build on. Confirm there is no half-flight or sunken room.
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Step-free entry and approach: a level, no-step path from the driveway, garage, or porch into the home. On a red-rock or hillside lot this is the first thing to verify in person, since the grade can add a step even when the home is one level.
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Wide doorways and halls: door and hallway widths that clear comfortably, plus turning room. Listings rarely give exact widths, so bring a tape measure to the ones that matter.
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Curbless shower and entry-level suite: a roll-in or curbless shower with room to move, plus the primary bedroom and bath on the entry level. Photos can hide a lip or a tight stall, so confirm on site.
The local map
Where the accessible homes actually are.
Accessible features follow the single-level building and the lay of the land more than any one neighborhood, so they turn up most where the ramblers, the newer construction, and the flatter lots are. Here is where step-free, one-level living concentrates in Santa Clara, and what to expect in each part of town.
Single-level ramblers citywide
Because this is a slab market, true one-level homes are spread across the city rather than confined to one area. That single-floor footprint is the foundation, so the single-story search is the natural companion to this one.
New construction
On a new build you can often select a single-level plan and specify a step-free entry, wider doorways, or a curbless shower before the slab is poured, which gets the features designed in rather than retrofitted later.
Old Town and the valley floor
The original pioneer grid and the flatter central streets sit on gentler ground, so a level approach is easier to find here. Some homes are older ranch-style single levels, so treat modern widths and thresholds as verify-in-person items.
The Santa Clara River corridor
The large, mostly level lots strung along the river, including The Vineyards, sit on flatter ground than the benches. Custom homes here are where a step-free entry and a wide, single-level layout can be built in on a level parcel.
The Snow Canyon side and benches
View lots on the Point at Snow Canyon and Arrowhead Mesa side put single-level homes on grade. Confirm the approach, since a hillside lot can add steps or slope between the driveway and the door even when the home itself is one level.
Established single-level neighborhoods
Older and mid-era pockets across town hold one-level homes on level lots. Some have level entries; others were built before modern widths, so these are verify-in-person homes rather than assume-the-features homes.
Before you tour: what to actually verify
The entry threshold: confirm a true zero-step route from the driveway or garage into the home, including any threshold lip and the step up from the garage floor. This is costly to add later, so verify it first and in person.
Door and hall widths: bring a tape measure. Listings almost never give exact widths, so measure the doorways and halls that matter to you rather than judging from photos.
The primary suite on one level: confirm the bedroom, bath, and laundry you rely on are all on the entry level, not up a half-flight to a bonus room or down to a basement space.
The bathroom: check whether the shower is truly curbless, the floor space, and the placement of fixtures. A photo can hide a lip or a tight stall that changes everything.
The driveway and lot grade: on a red-rock or hillside parcel, walk the approach for slope and any step between the driveway and the door. A one-level home can still sit on a graded lot that adds a climb.
Listing details are a lead: treat the MLS accessible features as listing-agent input to confirm, not as proof. They are not guaranteed accurate or complete, so verify each one independently.
Want the accessible shortlist, with every feature checked in person?
Tell me the budget, the part of town, and the exact features that matter, whether that is a true zero-step entry, wide doorways, or a curbless shower. I read these Santa Clara listings every week, and I will send the handful worth your Saturday, then verify each feature on site, including the driveway grade on a red-rock lot, with real measurements rather than trusting the listing photos.
Selling a single-level Santa Clara home with accessible features? The buyers reading this page are searching for exactly those features. List it with me, Scott Buehler, and it gets featured across MovingUtah, on the pages they are already reading.
Quick answers
Accessible-home shopping, answered.
On this page it means specific physical features of the home, such as a step-free entry, wider doorways and halls, a curbless or roll-in shower, and a single-level floor plan with no stairs. I keep it to the property and the features themselves. Those details come from listing-agent input, so they are not guaranteed accurate or complete, which is why I verify each one in person rather than relying on the listing.
There is heavy overlap, but they are not identical. A single-level floor plan is the foundation many accessible features build on, and single-level ramblers are common in Santa Clara. But one level alone does not guarantee a step-free entry or a curbless shower, and on a red-rock or hillside lot the approach can still add a step or a slope. I usually run this search alongside the single-story homes and we confirm the specific features on each.
They follow the single-level building more than any one neighborhood, so most often the newer benches and custom communities, the level lots along the Santa Clara River corridor, and one-level ramblers spread across town. New construction is where features are easiest to get designed in. The live listings above are the honest count on any given week.
Sometimes, yes. A lot of the character inventory sits on red-rock grade and hillside lots near Snow Canyon and along the Santa Clara River bluffs, where the slope is part of the appeal, so a level, no-step approach takes more looking there than on the flatter valley-floor streets. The upside is desert weather: no snow or ice, so the entry concern is grade and a shaded level path, not winter.
In person, with measurements. The accessible details in a listing come from what the listing agent entered and are not guaranteed accurate or complete, so treat them as a lead. Check the entry threshold for any step or lip, measure the doorways and halls, confirm the shower is truly curbless, look for the primary suite on the entry level, and check the driveway grade on a red-rock lot. I do this on every home before anyone relies on it.
Tell me the budget, the part of town, and the exact features that matter to you, and I will flag matching listings as they go live, usually the same morning. Because the filter is narrow, a standing alert is the realistic way to catch the right one. Pair that with a pre-approval and you can move when one lists.