Homes with Virtual Tours in Santa Clara, Utah
Santa Clara sits at the southwestern edge of Washington County, tucked between the Virgin River and the red-rock foothills just west of St. George. Home prices here have climbed steadily over the past several years, with single-family properties commonly ranging from the mid-$400s to well over $1 million depending on lot size, finish level, and proximity to the Santa Clara River Reserve trail system. The city draws a mix of retiring snowbirds, remote workers relocating from California and Nevada, and growing Utah families who want a quieter zip code than St. George proper while staying minutes from the I-15 corridor and the St. George Regional Airport. Because so many buyers are relocating from out of state — or even out of the country — virtual tours have become genuinely useful here, not a novelty feature. A buyer in the Bay Area or Seattle can walk a Santa Clara floor plan at midnight, assess the backyard exposure against the afternoon sun, and arrive for an in-person visit already knowing which rooms work for them.
Listings with virtual tours in Santa Clara typically include interactive 3D walkthroughs (most commonly Matterport), video walkthroughs, or both, giving you a far more accurate sense of ceiling height, natural light, and spatial flow than photos alone can convey. This matters especially in a market where desert-modern architecture, open-concept great rooms, and indoor-outdoor living spaces are common — details that compress awkwardly in a gallery of still images. If you're weighing a home in the Kayenta art community, along the Ancestor Square corridor, or in one of the newer subdivisions closer to Lava Ridge Road, a virtual tour lets you compare layouts side by side before scheduling a showing. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market.
June 2026 · Santa Clara market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Santa Clara right now.
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Active listings
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Common questions
About homes with virtual tours in Santa Clara.
Why are virtual tours especially useful for Santa Clara listings? ▾
A lot of Santa Clara buyers are relocating from out of state — California, the Pacific Northwest, and the Wasatch Front are the most common feeders. A 3D walkthrough or video tour lets someone in Sacramento or Salt Lake actually understand a floor plan in The Heights or Entrada before booking a flight to St. George Regional Airport.
What types of virtual tours do Santa Clara listings typically include? ▾
Most use Matterport 3D scans, which let you walk through room by room. Some agents add drone video to show lot lines, red rock backdrops, or proximity to the Santa Clara River trail and Snow Canyon. A handful include twilight photography to show how the home looks against the sandstone at sunset.
Can I make an offer based on a virtual tour alone? ▾
Yes, and out-of-state buyers do it regularly here. We recommend pairing the 3D tour with a live FaceTime walkthrough so your agent can show you details the camera misses — HVAC age, paver condition, the actual feel of the backyard. An inspection contingency protects you either way.
Do virtual tours show the surrounding neighborhood and views? ▾
Standard 3D tours stop at the property line, but most Santa Clara listings now include drone footage that captures the Pine Valley Mountains, the lava fields, and the golf course corridors in Entrada and Sunbrook. Ask your agent for the full media package — the MLS sometimes only links to the interior scan.
How current are the virtual tours on active listings? ▾
Tours are almost always shot within a week of the home hitting the market, so what you see is what's currently there. If a home has been listed more than 60 days or had a price drop, ask whether anything has changed — paint, staging, or landscaping updates don't always trigger a re-shoot.
Are virtual tours common across all Santa Clara price points? ▾
They're nearly universal above $700K and very common in the $500K–$700K range, where buyers from out of the area drive demand. Under $450K — mostly older homes near Lava Flow Drive or the original Santa Clara grid — you'll see more standard photo-only listings, though that's shifting fast.