Clubhouse, pool, fitness, tennis, bocce, and the Stallion Mountain Golf Club next door. The honest breakdown of what $170/month covers.
Solera at Stallion Mountain’s clubhouse is proportionate to its 838-home community — not the mega-complex of Sun City Summerlin, but a well-maintained facility that serves the community’s daily needs. Built in the mid-2000s, it features the standard Del Webb active adult amenity package updated for that era: pool and spa, fitness center, tennis, and social spaces.
The community is smaller than the flagship Sun City properties, which means the clubhouse tends to feel more personal — you will recognize faces at the pool and in fitness classes rather than encountering strangers every visit. For buyers who found Sun City Summerlin’s scale impersonal, Stallion Mountain’s intimacy is a feature, not a limitation.
Solera at Stallion Mountain is built adjacent to Stallion Mountain Golf Club, an 18-hole public golf course. This is not an exclusive community golf course — it is a public course that residents can play at standard public rates. The distinction matters: residents do not pay for golf access through their HOA fee, but they also do not have priority tee times or guaranteed availability that a private course would provide.
Individual home yard maintenance and exterior upkeep are the homeowner’s responsibility. This is a detached single-family community — residents maintain their own yards and home exteriors. Some buyers coming from communities that include lawn care in the HOA are surprised by this. The trade-off is the lower HOA fee; all-inclusive communities charge significantly more per month for those services.
Pickleball is not listed among Stallion Mountain’s original amenities — if this is important, verify the current court availability with the HOA, as many communities have added pickleball courts in recent years through retrofitting or new construction. Tennis courts are available and some communities convert under-used tennis space to pickleball.