Holladay is the east-bench premium pocket of Salt Lake County — population around 30,000, median Q1 2026 sale price $827,500 (second-highest in Salt Lake County), and a walkable village center that feels more New England than Utah suburb. Here is the honest read after 23 years selling Holladay real estate.
The Pros of Living in Holladay
Walkable Holladay Village. Holladay Village (around 2300 East 4800 South) has restaurants, the Holladay Library, the Holladay City Hall, the Old Mill amphitheater, and seasonal farmers markets all within walking distance. Few Utah suburbs have a true walkable downtown like this.
Top schools (public + private options). Holladay is served by Granite School District. Olympus High and Skyline High are strong public options. Plus, Holladay is the geographic center of Utah’s top private schools — Rowland Hall, Waterford, McGillis, and the Carden School are all within 15 minutes.
East-bench character with mature trees. Holladay was built out from the 1920s through 1970s, with significant 1980s-2000s infill. Streets are tree-lined, lots are larger (often 0.25-1 acre), and homes have character. New construction is mostly tear-down rebuilds, not subdivisions.
Easy canyon access. Holladay sits between Big Cottonwood Canyon (15 minutes) and Mill Creek Canyon (10 minutes). Hiking, fall foliage drives, and skiing are out your door. Few suburbs sit this close to canyon access.
Holladay/Cottonwood lifestyle community. The Holladay-Cottonwood Heights corridor draws long-term residents who stay for decades. Strong neighborhood associations, community events, and a sense of place that newer suburbs don’t match. Many Holladay families are second or third generation in the city.
The Cons of Living in Holladay
Expensive. Holladay’s $827,500 Q1 2026 median puts it among the priciest Salt Lake County cities. Entry-level Holladay starts around $550K (small condos or fixer-uppers). Walkable Holladay Village or canyon-view lots routinely sell $1.2M-$3M+.
Older homes need work. Many Holladay homes were built before 1990. HVAC, electrical, plumbing, and bathrooms often need updates. Lead paint and asbestos disclosures apply to pre-1978 homes. Budget for renovation costs on top of purchase price.
Limited inventory. Holladay is small (population 30K). Inventory turns over slowly. Buyers searching for a specific neighborhood may wait months for the right listing. Be ready to move fast when the right home appears.
Traffic on 2300 East. 2300 East is Holladay’s main north-south route and gets congested at rush hour. Combined with the canyon-adjacent geography, you have fewer routes to redistribute traffic.
School district boundaries vary. Holladay straddles Granite School District boundaries. Some neighborhoods feed Olympus High, others Skyline High, others Cottonwood. Verify exact school assignments before buying with school choice in mind.
Is Holladay right for you?
Holladay is the best fit if you want east-bench character, walkable village amenities, top schools, canyon access, and you have the budget for a premium suburb. It is less ideal if you want newer construction, sub-$500K options, or to avoid older-home renovation work. We have helped many empty nesters downsize within Holladay because once families establish here, they tend to stay even as kids leave the house.
Looking for a home in Holladay?
Kris Bowen has been a licensed Utah real estate broker since 2003. We know Holladay block by block. Call 801-999-8005 for a confidential consultation, or request a free home value report if you already own here. Browse current listings via our Holladay Real Estate page.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Holladay a good place to raise kids?
Yes — strong Granite District public schools plus easy access to Utah’s top private schools, mature established neighborhoods, walkable to amenities, low crime. Many Holladay families stay through multiple generations.
How does Holladay compare to Cottonwood Heights?
Holladay is more walkable, slightly older housing stock, similar pricing, with more emphasis on village center commerce. Cottonwood Heights is more residential, closer to Big Cottonwood Canyon, with slightly more recent development.
What is the median home price in Holladay?
Q1 2026: median sale price was $827,500 — second-highest in Salt Lake County after Cottonwood Heights. Average sale price approximately $1,143,920, with luxury east-bench homes reaching $5M+.
Are Holladay homes good for empty nesters?
Often yes — single-level ranchers in older Holladay neighborhoods, walkability to amenities, and stable property values make Holladay popular with empty nesters who want to downsize but stay in their established community. See our Holladay Homeowner Options page.
What is Holladay Village?
Holladay Village is the historic city center around 2300 East 4800 South. Restaurants, library, City Hall, seasonal markets, summer concerts at the Old Mill amphitheater. Walkable village center unusual for Utah suburbs.
