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Brookside, Utah

Homes with RV Garages for Sale in Brookside, Utah

Brookside is a small unincorporated pocket of Washington County tucked between St. George and the Arizona line, and it has quietly become one of the better spots in Southern Utah to own a home with a dedicated RV garage. The terrain is flat enough for deep lots, the county's setback and outbuilding rules are friendlier than what you'd hit inside St. George city limits, and the buyer pool here skews heavily toward retirees and recreation owners who actually use their toys. Sand Hollow, Quail Creek, Gooseberry Mesa, and the Arizona Strip are all within easy towing distance, so a 14-foot-tall bay with a 50-amp plug and a dump station isn't a luxury — it's the reason a lot of people moved to this corner of the state.

Most RV-garage homes in Brookside sit on quarter-acre to full-acre parcels, with single-level floor plans between roughly 2,200 and 3,800 square feet and price points generally running from the upper $600s into the low seven figures depending on lot size, bay dimensions, and finish. Expect to see 40-to-50-foot-deep bays, epoxy floors, mini-splits or full HVAC in the garage, and pull-through driveways on the better builds. Browse the active listings below to see which RV-friendly properties are currently on the market in Brookside, and check the garage dimensions in the remarks — they vary more than the photos suggest.

May 2026 · Brookside market

Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Brookside right now.

Full Brookside market report
Median sale
$791,000
1 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
155 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
93.1%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
2
active + pending

1 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About homes with rv garages in Brookside.

Why are RV garages so common in Brookside listings?

Brookside sits in Washington County where outdoor recreation drives the lifestyle. Owners keep travel trailers, side-by-sides, boats for Sand Hollow and Quail Creek, and toy haulers for Sand Mountain and the Arizona Strip. Big detached vehicles need a place to live, and HOAs in unincorporated areas are generally lenient enough that purpose-built RV garages pencil out for builders.

What dimensions should I look for in an RV garage here?

A usable RV bay in this area typically runs 14-foot doors and 40+ feet deep to fit a Class A motorhome or a fifth-wheel with the truck still attached. Some Brookside builds go to 16-foot doors and 50 feet deep for larger diesel pushers. Always confirm interior clear height, not just door height, since HVAC and lighting can eat into clearance.

Are there water or sewer hookups inside the RV garage?

Higher-end Brookside homes often include a dump station, fresh water fill, and a 30/50-amp plug inside the bay so you can prep the rig without leaving the property. Mid-range builds usually have the power but skip the sewer connection. The MLS remarks and seller disclosures will spell out exactly what's plumbed.

Can I run a business or short-term rental out of the RV garage?

Brookside is unincorporated Washington County, so zoning is generally more permissive than inside St. George city limits, but commercial use rules still apply. Storing personal RVs and toys is fine; running a repair shop or renting the bay out is a different conversation. Check current county code and any subdivision CC&Rs before assuming a use is allowed.

How does the price premium compare to a standard 3-car garage?

In the Brookside and greater Washington Fields submarket, an RV garage typically adds somewhere in the $40,000 to $90,000 range over a comparable home with a standard 3-car, depending on size, finish, and whether it's heated and cooled. Climate-controlled bays with epoxy floors and full hookups sit at the top of that range.

Is the climate in Brookside hard on stored RVs?

Summer surface temps on asphalt can push past 140°F and UV exposure degrades tires, seals, and decals fast. That's exactly why an enclosed, insulated RV garage is valuable here — it keeps the rig out of the sun and out of the blowing red dust that gets into every vent. Winters are mild, so freeze protection is rarely the main concern.