Alpine Homes offers new construction within planned neighborhoods and maintains a Draper office for buyer consultations. The team provides guidance from initial inquiry through walkthrough and closing, with online listings for current communities and quick move-ins.
Homebuyers note straightforward purchase experiences, flexible coordination for add-ons in select cases, and attentive communication from sales agents through closing. Quick move-in options can shorten timelines compared to fully custom builds.
Projects and communities are typically along the Wasatch Front in Utah. Contact Alpine Homes to confirm current cities and phases.
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New home construction, planned community builds, quick move-in inventory, design selections per plan, buyer walkthroughs, and post-close warranty coordination as described on their site.
Reviews commonly mention smooth transactions, supportive sales agents, and responsive warranty coordination for smaller punch-list items. Buyers of quick move-in homes often cite clear communication and timely scheduling. There are also critical reviews noting concerns with contracts and some construction issues, suggesting buyers should review documents carefully. Overall ratings reflect a mix of positive experiences with a smaller number of disputes.
Jonathan with Alpine Homes was wonderful to work with. He helped guide my clients through the homebuying process and made everything feel seamless. He was incredibly thorough every step of the way, and during the final walkthrough he truly went above and beyond for my clients. You can tell he genuinely cares about what he does and takes great pride in helping people through such an important purchase.???
I had a great experience with Alpine Homes. I purchase the plan with a built in Mother-in-law apartment. The home was already built when I walked through so was turnkey ready.I had a few small issues and the warranty department literally got people out within a day or two. From the sales team (I specifically worked with Sean) to the warranty department, it has been seamless.
My experience with Alpine Homes was great, simple, straightforward, and painless. We bought a quick move in and asked them to add some things. It was no problem and we love our home. It is a really great floor plan (Maple). Rob Ninow was the Alpine agent who helped us out. He was great! He was extremely helpful, on our side, and flexible - always finding time to meet us at the home and address our requests - even after we closed.
We started looking at Alpine Homes in the Highgate Subdivision in Early June before we moved from Mississippi to Utah!From the first time I drove in we loved the neighborhood and from the first time I Met Mr. Floyd Huston I knew we would be purchasing a home here.I Highly recommend Alpine Homes and especially Mr. Floyd he went above and beyond to help us and keep us updated on anything we had questions on or were waiting on.We could not be happier with the way everything went and all Alpine worked with us on with upgrades and all.Go see Mr. Floyd with Alpine homes if you are looking for a good home in a great location! There are still homes available!!We highly recommend Alpine Homes and Mr. Floyd Huston
CAUTION! All home buyers considering buying from Alpine Homes beware! Please look through your home purchase agreement with legal scrutiny before buying and know the risks. It is extremely biased towards Alpine Homes. Do not depend on Real Estate Agents to protect you. Alpine Homes stacks it against home buyers and they act in bad faith if there is any dispute. We bought our home in Nov 2021, and reported serious cracks in our foundation wall, cracks in door frames, window frames, and drywall due to settling in April 2024. They tried blaming us for backyard landscaping work, building a deck and patio, and the park development directly behind our house, rather than taking any responsibility or looking into the seriousness of the foundation damage. I asked Ross Mitchell, the VP, to engage their insurance since our home owners insurance denied the claim as they don’t cover damage due to soil movement or settling. TIP: Also confirm with your home owners insurance if they cover this kind of damage. Odds are they don’t. Ross declined to engage their insurance. The damage from the settling continued to get worse as it was escalated by the park construction behind our house that continued. We ended up having to vacate the property after a City inspection with a Structural Engineer determined the home was not safe to occupy in the long term. We’ve been out of the home since June 2024, and the home is going into foreclosure, since we can’t afford to pay the mortgage along with the rent for another place and legal expense to pursue mediation/arbitration per the home purchase agreement. We had mediation with Alpine Homes in Dec 2024, but they didn’t participate in good faith, not making any offer to help or settle. They had only just engaged their insurance company several weeks before mediation. We now have to engage the expensive process of initiating arbitration. Look up arbitration proceedings per the home buyers agreement and ask yourself if Home Buyers are on an equal footing as Home Builders. Home Buyers should not be subjected to that and if you see any agreement that subjects you to that, RUN AWAY! We’ve had to pay significant expenses out of pocket to pursue this as we don’t have liability insurance to fall back on like these companies do. We had to pay a geotechnical engineering firm to dig and collect soil samples for testing. The soil testing and observation from the excavation clearly showed the soil under the footings, directly below the large crack in the foundation was loose, dry, undocumented fill. It was not the native, load-bearing soil that was reported in Alpine Home’s original soil inspection report when constructing the foundation. Essentially, they self report with their own contracted engineer and the City just signs off on it. There are so many red flags about Alpine Home building practices. We are connecting with many others who bought from Alpine Homes are having similar problems, and we’ve connected with professionals in the industry. We even found that the soil inspection report from the construction of our home site was practically word-for-word the same as another home site in a completely different development. I wonder how many cookie-cutter soil inspection reports Alpine Homes is passing off as legitimate. Please do your research about Alpine Homes before doing any business with them. They do not advertise who their leadership are and have a bad reputation even within the construction industry. They don’t stand by quality or value for the home buyer. Rather they take advantage of the Home Buyer’s ignorance of the industry and act in bad faith if there is a dispute. You can look up our situation in the media as we had some coverage last year. Enjoy the pictures!
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