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Live St. George listings, filtered

Homes with solar in St. George.

Homes with solar on the St. George market, fed straight from the MLS and sorted newest first, with a local read on owned versus leased systems and what you have to check before closing.

Southern Utah resident 20+ years, licensed REALTOR + lender Listings from every participating brokerage

Newest first


The newest solar listings.

Fed straight from the local MLS and filtered to homes with solar panels: new St. George listings appear here as they list, and sold homes drop off. The local read on owned versus leased systems is just below.

If the grid looks thin today, that is the real market, not a glitch: solar listings come and go week to week. Tell me what you are after and I will flag the next match as soon as it lists.

Listing information comes from the local MLS and is deemed reliable but not guaranteed.

The local read


What solar really means in St. George.

St. George gets a lot of sun, so rooftop solar is common here. You will see it on newer builds and on older homes that added a system somewhere along the way. That is the easy part. The part that actually matters on a solar home is the question almost nobody asks first: who owns the panels?

That one fact changes the whole deal. An owned or paid-off system usually conveys with the home, the way a roof or a water heater would. A leased system or a solar loan is different, because it is a contract attached to the house, and it has to be addressed at closing. Most of the time the buyer has to qualify to assume the lease, or the balance gets paid off as part of the sale. None of that is a dealbreaker by itself, but it is something you settle before you sign, not after, so we pull the solar agreement early.

Once the ownership question is answered, the rest is straightforward property stuff you can verify. Look at the roof orientation and whether anything shades the array. Look at how old the system is and how large it is. Ask whether there is battery storage, because a home with a battery behaves differently than one with panels alone. These are facts on a page, and I will help you line them up against the listing.

This page exists for one reason: to make sure you ask the ownership question before you fall for the utility math. Earlier in the process than "show me listings"? Start with the St. George guide or the cost of living page. When a home below reads right, that is the moment to call.

Owned vs leased solar

  • Who owns the panels: an owned or paid-off system usually conveys with the home. A lease or a solar loan is a contract that has to be handled at closing, so confirm it first.

  • Roof orientation and shade: a south-facing array with a clear sky reads differently than panels on a shaded or awkward slope.

  • System age and size: ask when it was installed and how large it is. An older, smaller system is not the same asset as a recent, full-roof one.

  • Battery storage: some homes pair the panels with a battery and some do not. Either way, verify the solar agreement before closing.

Solar list range Spans the full market around the ~$500K median Local MLS, verify quarterly
The first question Owned or paid-off vs leased or financed Read the solar agreement
What else to verify Orientation, system age and size, battery Property facts you can check
How my dual role works. I am licensed in both real estate and mortgage lending. On any single purchase I take one role only, never both at once, and every role is disclosed. You are always free to choose your own agent and your own lender. The full explanation is on How I Work.

The local map


Where the solar homes turn up.

Solar is scattered across St. George rather than penned into one corner. You will find it on newer south-side builds and on older central homes that added a system later. Here is how the lay of the land shapes what you are likely to see, and what to confirm in each.

Little Valley

Newer south-side subdivisions where recent roofs make rooftop arrays a natural fit. On a current build, ask whether the panels are owned outright or carried on a loan.

SunRiver

Large single-level lots on the south end, where wide, low rooflines give panels a clean orientation. Confirm the system age on the ones that added solar after the build.

Desert Color & Divario

Master-planned new construction on the south end. Solar and battery storage are sometimes offered as options here, and on a new build you can ask how the system is owned before closing.

The Ledges

North-side custom and semi-custom homes on larger lots. Custom roofs can have varied slopes, so orientation and shade are worth a close look on any array up here.

Stone Cliff

A gated east-side enclave of larger custom homes. Where solar shows up here, read the agreement closely to see whether it conveys or carries a balance.

Central St. George

Bloomington, Dixie Downs, and Green Valley are older areas where solar is usually a later add-on. That makes the install date and the ownership terms the first things to verify.

Before you tour: what to actually check

Ownership: owned, paid off, leased, or on a loan. Ask for it in writing before anything else.

The agreement: if it is leased or financed, read who can assume it and what has to happen at closing.

Roof orientation: which way the array faces, and whether anything throws shade across it.

System age and size: when it was installed and how much of the roof it covers.

Battery storage: whether the home has a battery, and if so, who owns it and how old it is.

The roof underneath: the panels sit on a roof, so ask its age and condition along with the system.

Scott Buehler, Moving Utah

Want the solar shortlist without the homework?

Tell me the budget, the part of town, and whether owned panels are a must-have. I read these listings every week, and I will send the handful worth your Saturday, with the ownership question already answered on each one so you are not untangling a lease at the closing table.

Selling a St. George home with solar? The buyers reading this page are searching for exactly that. List it with me, Scott Buehler, and it gets featured across MovingUtah, on the pages they are already reading.

See how featuring works Start with your number

Quick answers


Solar home shopping, answered.

Who owns the panels. That one fact changes everything about the deal. An owned or paid-off system usually conveys with the home, while a leased system or a solar loan has to be addressed at closing. Get the answer in writing before you fall for the rest of the listing, and I am happy to read the solar paperwork with you.

A leased system or a solar loan does not just disappear at the closing table. The buyer typically has to qualify to assume the lease, or the balance gets paid off as part of the sale. Either way it is a contract that needs to be read and handled before closing, not after, so we pull the agreement early.

Whole-home list prices cover a wide range across the city, and a solar system is one feature among many rather than a price tier of its own. The live listings above are the honest answer on any given week. What I steer buyers away from is the utility math: ask the ownership question first, then weigh the rest.

Yes. St. George gets a lot of sun, so rooftop solar shows up across the city, on newer builds and on older homes that added a system later. Because the systems were installed at different times and under different terms, no two solar homes are alike, which is exactly why the ownership question matters on each one.

Roof orientation and any shade over the array, the age and size of the system, and whether there is battery storage. A south-facing array on a recent roof reads differently than an older system on a shaded slope. These are property facts you can verify, and I will help you line them up against the listing.

Tell me the budget, the part of town, and whether owned panels are a must-have, and I will flag matching St. George listings as they go live, usually the same morning. We confirm the solar ownership on each one before you spend a Saturday touring it.