Live St. George listings
St. George homes for sale.
The St. George market, fed straight from the MLS and sorted newest first. Tighten it up with the filters below, or jump straight to the map.
Search the St. George market
Live MLS, updated continuallySearch every St. George listing.
Set your price, beds, and home type, or search by address or neighborhood. Every result is a live MLS listing from every participating brokerage, sorted newest first.
Newest first
The latest homes to hit the market.
New St. George homes show up here the morning they list, and the moment one goes under contract or sells, it drops off. No stale listings padding the count, and not just my own.
See every listing on the map
The full St. George inventory with the map, list view, and search filters. No account needed to look.
Hear about new matches first
Tell me what you are after and I will flag new listings that fit, usually the morning they go live.
Widen the search nearby
Same region, different markets: Washington, Santa Clara, and Ivins each have their own page.
Listing information comes from the local MLS and is deemed reliable but not guaranteed.
Browse by what matters
Looking for something more specific?
Each filter below is its own page, with local context on that slice of the market and live listings to match. Pick the one that sounds like your search.
By price
By property type
By feature
Resort & lifestyle
By neighborhood
Building instead of buying resale?
Master-planned communities are selling across the St. George area, from Little Valley to Desert Color. The new construction page tracks who is building, where, and in what price ranges.
Every page above carries its own live listings. If one runs thin, inventory in that slice is thin right now, and the page says so plainly.
Where to look
The parts of town, and what each one is.
St. George is not one market, it is a dozen of them stacked around the valley: farmland turning into new subdivisions on the southeast, mature golf-course streets on the south, red-rock benches and gated golf on the edges. Here is where the marquee communities sit and what you find in each. Every one has its own page with live listings, and the St. George communities index maps all 160-plus neighborhoods by area.
Southeast
Little Valley
Former Washington Fields farmland along 3000 South, now the valley's fastest-building area. Expect newer single-level homes on larger-than-average lots, phased 2020s subdivisions, and red-rock and mountain views to the east. If you want a newer home with a yard and a bit of room, start here.
Far southeast, Southern Parkway
Desert Color
The newest frontier out by the regional airport and the Arizona line, built around a recreational lagoon. A mix of single-family homes, townhomes, and vacation-style product, plus the Regency 55+ village, along the Southern Parkway with Desert Canyons next door.
South, near the Virgin River
Bloomington
One of St. George's original master communities, anchored by the Bloomington Country Club golf course. Established streets from the Country Club to the Ranches, unusually mature landscaping for the desert, and quick access to the southern I-15 exits.
Southwest
Green Valley
Close-in and established on the west side, next to the Bearclaw Poppy mountain-bike trails and the Green Valley Sports Village. A range of resale homes and newer infill enclaves, minutes from downtown, with the Tonaquint area and the Santa Clara River just south.
Northwest, against Snow Canyon
Entrada at Snow Canyon
Guard-gated golf community on the red-and-black rock northwest edge, wrapped around the private Johnny Miller course at Snow Canyon. Custom estates and view lots at the top of the standard market, with the new Divario master plan and gated Seven Hills nearby.
East bench, above town
Stone Cliff
Guard-gated custom-home community climbing the hillside above the Little Valley side of town, minutes from the center but set apart. Ridge-top lots, larger estate homes, and some of the strongest valley and red-rock views in St. George.
South, I-15 Exit 2
SunRiver
The area's original active-adult (55+) golf community, tucked against the freeway at Exit 2 on the far south side. Single-level homes around a golf course and recreation center, priced below the valley median, for anyone who qualifies for age-restricted living.
Far north, Highway 18
The Ledges
A public-golf master plan up SR-18 above Snow Canyon, cooler and higher than the valley floor. View lots and villages from The Fairways to Sand Cove and Fish Rock, with the acreage of Winchester Hills and Diamond Valley farther up the highway.
West, new master plan
Divario
A 730-acre master plan on the west side, one of the most active new-construction addresses in the valley. Italian-named villages from Sentieri Canyon to Valencia, so most of what you see here is a build slot or a just-finished home rather than long-held resale.
That is the short list. The communities index files every neighborhood under its part of town: south and Bloomington, southeast Little Valley and Washington Fields, the Southern Parkway, southwest Green Valley and Tonaquint, the northwest Snow Canyon benches, and the far north up Highway 18, so you can work outward from the area that fits before you ever open the map.
What budgets buy here
Read the market by price band.
With the anchored median around $500,000, each hundred-thousand-dollar step changes what shows up and where. Here is the ladder, from the entry point to the top of the market. Each rung is its own page with live listings filtered to that range.
Shop by property type
Filter to the kind of home you actually want.
Some searches are about the house itself, not the neighborhood. These filters matter in St. George for reasons particular to a desert resort town, from single-level living to the space to park a toy hauler. Each is its own page with local context and live listings. If a retirement move is part of what's driving the search, our retirement guide covers that decision at the statewide level.
Single-story homes
The default here. Most new Little Valley and Washington Fields product is built single-level on a slab, and no-stairs living is what a lot of St. George buyers come for.
Private pool homes
With 300-plus days of sun a year, a backyard pool earns its keep here more than almost anywhere in Utah. Common in the established south and on the newer larger lots.
Golf course homes
St. George has more golf than any valley in the region. Frontage runs from Bloomington and SunRiver to the private courses at Entrada and the public one at The Ledges.
Short-term rental homes
Nightly-rental zoning is limited and specific in St. George, concentrated in vacation-designated communities like Desert Color. This page filters to homes where the use is permitted.
New construction
St. George builds more new homes than anywhere in Southern Utah, concentrated in Little Valley, Desert Color, Divario, and The Ledges. Standing inventory and build slots, side by side.
RV garage homes
In a town built around Sand Hollow, Zion, and the trails, deep RV bays and toy-hauler garages are their own category. Most turn up on the larger newer lots out southeast.
Acreage & horse property
Larger parcels sit on the valley edges: Washington Fields' agricultural heritage lots and the acreage up north at Winchester Hills and Diamond Valley. See also horse property.
55+ communities
St. George has one of Utah's deepest active-adult segments, led by SunRiver and the Regency village at Desert Color. Single-level, low-maintenance, age-restricted living near amenities.
No-HOA homes
So much of St. George is master-planned that homes with no association are worth filtering for on their own. They cluster in the older parts of town and on the acreage lots at the edges.
Every filter on the full browse directory above works the same way: local context on that slice of the market, then the live listings to match.
The market right now
What shopping this market is actually like.
The anchored median in St. George sits around $500,000, and what that figure buys is the part it hides. It tends to land on a newer single-level home on a Little Valley or Washington Fields lot, or an established place with a yard and mature trees in Bloomington, Green Valley, or the Tonaquint pockets along the Santa Clara River. The red-rock view lots on the east bench above town and the guard-gated golf communities out at Entrada and up at The Ledges sit well above it, and the townhome and condo product downtown and around SunRiver runs below.
The calendar drives this market as much as price does. Sellers put homes up from late winter into early summer, so choice is widest from roughly March through June and the fresh, well-priced listings are gone within a weekend or two. The heat of July and August thins new supply, then a second, quieter wave opens in fall. The stretch from November through February is the visitor season St. George is built around: snowbirds and out-of-state shoppers touring in shirtsleeves while the rest of the Mountain West is frozen, which keeps demand under the resort-style and 55+ product long after the local spring rush has cooled.
Where a home sits changes how it moves. New construction is concentrated on the south and east edges: Little Valley, the Washington Fields corridor, Desert Color and Desert Canyons along the Southern Parkway toward the airport, and Divario on the northwest, where builders release in phases and a standing-inventory home can be quicker to close than a build slot. The established southwest and south, Bloomington and Green Valley and Tonaquint, turns over on resale alone, so inventory there is thinner and the well-kept homes draw attention fast. The view-lot and gated tiers up on the benches and the golf courses are their own smaller market, priced by the outlook and the frontage more than the square footage.
If you are earlier than "show me listings," start with the St. George guide for the full picture of the area, the cost of living page for the monthly math, or the first-time buyer page if this is your first run at it. When a listing catches your eye, that is when to call.
The rest of the picture
Beyond the listings.
This page is the market. Everything else about living in St. George (the schools and school-boundary questions, the summer heat and the mild winters, the drive times to Zion and the airport, the neighborhoods in depth) is on the pages below.
The St. George guide
The full city write-up: climate, commutes, the airport and I-15, red-rock recreation, and how the valley fits together.
All communities
Every St. George neighborhood mapped by area, from the master plans down to the individual subdivisions.
St. George vs. Cedar City
Weighing the two Southern Utah anchors on price, climate, and pace before you commit to a valley.
Next-door Washington
The neighboring city just east, sharing the valley and often the value, with Coral Canyon and Green Spring golf.
Want a Southern Utah pro reading the listings with you?
Tell me the budget, the part of town, and the must-haves. I read these listings every morning and know this market street by street, and I will tell you straight which homes earn a look and which photos are working too hard.
Want to sell your home in St. George? List it with me, Scott Buehler, and it gets featured across MovingUtah, on the pages buyers are already reading.
Quick answers
St. George listings, answered.
They come straight from the local MLS feed and update continually. New St. George listings appear the day they hit the market, sold and under-contract homes drop off, and the newest listings sort to the top. It is the same data agents work from.
Every participating brokerage's listings, through the MLS. If a home is actively listed in St. George, it should be here and on the full map search, not just the homes one office happens to represent.
The anchored median sits around $500,000. In St. George that generally means a newer single-level home in a growth area like Little Valley or the Washington Fields corridor, or an established home with a yard and mature trees in Bloomington, Green Valley, or the Tonaquint area near the Santa Clara River. Prices move, so treat that as a starting point and confirm against the live listings.
Both are on the table here, more than in most Utah cities. St. George builds more new homes than anywhere in Southern Utah, concentrated in Little Valley, Desert Color and Desert Canyons along the Southern Parkway, and Divario on the west, so a newer single-level home is realistic near the median. Resale gets you the established south and southwest: Bloomington, Green Valley, Tonaquint, with mature landscaping and bigger trees that a brand-new lot will not have for years. The new construction page tracks who is building where, and this page carries the resale side.
Not to browse, and not to talk with me. You will want one before writing an offer, though: sellers in St. George take pre-approved buyers seriously, and it settles your real budget before you fall for the wrong house. The getting pre-approved guide walks through how it works.
The listing data is the same MLS feed, so accuracy is not the difference. The difference is that every filter page here explains what that slice of the St. George market actually looks like, and when you reach out, you get someone who has worked this region for 20 years, not a call center selling your number as a lead.
List with me and your home is featured across the site: on this page, on the St. George hub, and in the featured listings buyers browse. The get featured page shows how that works, and the home valuation page is the natural first step.
Only in the right spot. Nightly-rental use is limited and specific in St. George, and it is not something you can assume anywhere in the city. It is concentrated in vacation-designated communities like Desert Color, where the zoning and community rules allow it. The short-term rental page filters to homes where the use is actually permitted, and I always confirm the current rules for a specific address before you write on it.