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Live St. George listings, filtered

Homes with vaulted ceilings in St. George.

Homes with vaulted or cathedral ceilings on the St. George market, fed straight from the MLS and sorted newest first, with a local read on where the volume shows up and the trade-offs.

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

Newest first


The newest vaulted-ceiling listings.

Fed straight from the local MLS and filtered to homes with vaulted or cathedral ceilings: new St. George listings appear here as they list, and sold homes drop off. The local read on where the volume shows up is just below.

If the grid looks thin today, that is the real market, not a glitch: a vaulted ceiling is not always called out in the listing data, so some weeks the matches run lean. 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 a vaulted ceiling means in St. George.

A vaulted or cathedral ceiling opens up the volume of a room: instead of running flat, it angles up into the roofline, and that makes a great room feel a good deal bigger than its footprint. In St. George the vault shows up most often over the great room, and you also see it in the entry or the primary bedroom. It is the kind of feature that reads small on paper and lands hard the moment you walk in.

Where they turn up is spread across the city rather than one pocket. Great-room plans in the newer south and east growth lean into the high volume, and a lot of the custom and semi-custom homes around St. George were built with it from the start. Certain production designs include it too, so this is less about one neighborhood and more about the floor plan. If the vault is what you are after, read the photos and the plan, because the listing data does not always call it out.

The trade worth knowing in the desert: more volume means more air to heat and cool. It is not a reason to walk away from a vaulted great room, but it is a reason to ask how the home handles it, the insulation, the ductwork, and whether the cooling setup was sized for the taller room. A well-built home carries that volume fine, and I am happy to flag what to look at before you tour.

The upside that comes with the vault is the light. Tall windows or a clerestory usually ride along the high wall, and on the right lot they frame a red-rock or ridge view from up high, which is a real part of the appeal here. 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.

What to weigh with a vaulted ceiling

  • The openness: a vault makes a room feel bigger than its square footage, and it brings in more light from up high. It is the first thing you notice walking in.

  • The extra volume: more air to heat and cool in a desert summer. Ask about the insulation and whether the cooling setup was sized for the taller room.

  • Tall windows: the high glass or clerestory that often comes with a vault. On the right lot it frames a red-rock or ridge view from up the wall.

  • Where the vault sits: over the great room, the entry, or the primary. Confirm which room carries the volume before you fall for a single photo.

Typical vaulted list range Spans the ~$500K median both ways Local MLS, verify quarterly
Where the volume shows up Great-room plans, custom and semi-custom homes Across the city, not one pocket
Most common spot Over the great room, sometimes entry or primary Local MLS pattern
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 vaulted ceilings actually are.

A vault follows the floor plan more than the neighborhood, so it shows up across St. George. Here are the areas where great-room volume turns up most, plus the older pocket where a vaulted ceiling is the exception worth a second look.

Little Valley

South-side subdivisions with recent floor plans, where a vaulted great room is a common feature on the larger plans and the upper windows often catch a ridge view.

SunRiver

Single-level homes on the south end, where open great-room plans and the occasional vaulted ceiling keep the main living space feeling larger than its footprint.

Desert Color & Divario

Master-planned new construction on the south end. Current floor plans often include a vaulted great room, and on a new build you can usually confirm the ceiling before the framing goes up.

The Ledges

North-side custom and semi-custom homes near the golf course, where higher ceilings and big great-room windows are common on the larger lots.

Stone Cliff

A gated east-side enclave of larger custom homes. Vaulted and cathedral ceilings show up here, often paired with tall glass framing the red-rock backdrop.

Central St. George

Bloomington, Dixie Downs, and much of Green Valley skew older and more often run flat ceilings, so a vaulted great room there is the exception. Read the plan closely if you find one.

Before you tour: what to actually check

Which room is vaulted: a photo can sell the great room while the rest of the home runs flat. Confirm where the volume actually is.

Cooling and insulation: ask how the taller room is conditioned and whether the system was sized for the extra volume.

The high windows: stand in the room and see what the upper glass or clerestory frames. On the right lot it catches a red-rock or ridge view.

Light and afternoon sun: tall west-facing glass brings heat as well as light. Note the orientation and any shading.

Upkeep up high: fans, light fixtures, and tall windows that need reach. Check how they are accessed for cleaning and bulbs.

Sound and scale: open volume carries sound and can feel cavernous unfurnished. Walk it to see how the space lives.

Scott Buehler, Moving Utah

Want the vaulted-ceiling shortlist without the homework?

Tell me the budget, the part of town, and whether you want the vault over the great room, the entry, or the primary. I read these listings every week, and I will send the handful worth your Saturday, with straight answers about the ones where the ceiling photographs taller than it lives and how the home handles the volume.

Selling a St. George home with a vaulted or cathedral great room? 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.

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Quick answers


Vaulted-ceiling shopping, answered.

A vaulted or cathedral ceiling angles up away from the walls instead of running flat, so the room opens into the roof volume and feels bigger than its footprint. In St. George you see it most often over the great room, sometimes in an entry or the primary bedroom. The listing will not always spell it out, so I read the photos and the plan with you to confirm where the volume actually is.

They turn up across the city rather than in one pocket. Great-room plans in the newer south and east growth, like Little Valley, Desert Color, Divario, and the Ledges, lean into the high volume, and many custom and semi-custom homes in areas like Stone Cliff and Entrada were built with it. Certain production designs include it too, so the live listings above are the honest read on any given week.

More volume means more air to condition, so it is a fair question to ask in a St. George summer. The thing to check is how the home handles it: the insulation, the ductwork, and whether the cooling setup was sized for the taller room. A well-built home carries the volume fine, and I am happy to flag what to look at before you tour.

Not by themselves. A vault often rides with a larger great-room plan or a custom home, so those listings can sit above the city's mid-point, but plenty of mid-range homes have a vaulted great room too. Whole-home prices cover a wide range, and the live listings above are the honest answer on any given week.

Often, yes, and that is a big part of the appeal here. A vault usually comes with tall windows or a clerestory above the standard line, and on the right lot that upper glass frames a red-rock or ridge view from higher up the wall. On a home backing the bluffs or facing open desert it is worth standing in the great room to see what the high glass actually catches.

Tell me the budget, the part of town, and whether you want the vault over the great room, the entry, or the primary, and I will flag matching listings as they go live, usually the same morning. Pair that with a pre-approval and you can tour the good ones before the weekend crowd does.