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Washington Terrace, Utah

Homes with Virtual Tours in Washington Terrace, Utah

Washington Terrace sits on the bench just south of Ogden, a small Weber County city of about 9,500 with mid-century ramblers, split-levels, and a growing pocket of newer infill near 36th Street and Washington Boulevard. Most homes here trade in the mid $300s to low $500s, which makes it one of the more reachable corners of the Ogden metro for first-time buyers, military families stationed at Hill Air Force Base (about 15 minutes south), and folks commuting to downtown Ogden or McKay-Dee Hospital. Because inventory moves quickly and a lot of buyers shopping the Terrace are relocating from out of state or from the Wasatch Front's southern half, listings that include a walk-through video or 3D tour tend to get more qualified showings and fewer wasted Saturdays.

Virtual tour listings in Washington Terrace are especially useful given the city's mix of older housing stock — a 1960s rambler on 5600 South can look identical to a dozen others from the street, but the basement layout, updates, and lot grade vary a lot. A Matterport scan or agent-led video walkthrough lets you check ceiling heights in a finished basement, see whether the kitchen has been opened up, and judge the actual condition of bathrooms before booking a showing. The homes below all include some form of virtual tour, whether that's a 3D model, a video walk-through, or a narrated YouTube tour. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market.

May 2026 · Washington Terrace market

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

Full Washington Terrace market report
Median sale
$385,000
7 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
23 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
98.5%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
20
active + pending

3 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About homes with virtual tours in Washington Terrace.

What kinds of virtual tours show up on Washington Terrace listings?

Most fall into three buckets: Matterport 3D scans you can click through room by room, agent-narrated video walk-throughs hosted on YouTube or Vimeo, and simple slideshow tours built from the listing photos. Matterport is the most useful for judging layout and flow, while video tours give a better feel for natural light and neighborhood context.

Are virtual tours reliable enough to make an offer sight-unseen?

For out-of-state buyers — common here with military PCS moves to Hill AFB — a 3D tour plus a live FaceTime walkthrough with your agent is often enough to write an offer. We still recommend a thorough inspection contingency, since tours can't show roof condition, crawl space issues, or the slope of the back lot, which matters on some of the bench properties.

Do new construction homes in Washington Terrace include virtual tours?

Builders working the infill lots near 400 East and 4800 South sometimes post model-home tours rather than tours of the specific address, since the home may still be framing. Ask your agent to confirm whether the tour reflects the exact floor plan, finishes, and lot you'd be buying.

Why do some Washington Terrace listings skip virtual tours entirely?

Older ramblers held by long-time owners often go to market with photos only — the seller may not want a 3D scan of personal belongings, or the listing agent may be working a quick-turn estate sale. If a home you like has no tour, your agent can usually request a video walkthrough from the listing side.

How current is the virtual tour on a listing I'm watching?

Tours are typically shot within a week of the home hitting the MLS, so what you see is current to listing date. If a property has been active for 60+ days, ask whether anything has changed — paint, staging, or price reductions sometimes happen without the tour being re-shot.

Can I see basements and garages in these tours?

Usually yes for Matterport scans, which capture the full interior including finished basements — important in Washington Terrace where a lot of square footage lives downstairs. Garages and unfinished storage rooms are hit-or-miss; agents sometimes skip them to keep the tour focused on living space.