Live La Verkin listings, filtered
Cul-de-sac homes in La Verkin.
Homes on a cul-de-sac on the La Verkin market, fed straight from the MLS and sorted newest first, with a local read on which bench streets actually dead-end and how to read the lot at the bulb.
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Want it narrower? Tell me your exact spec.
Newest first
The newest cul-de-sac listings.
Fed straight from the local MLS and filtered to homes on a cul-de-sac: new La Verkin listings appear here as they list, and sold homes drop off. The local read on which bench streets actually dead-end, and why you confirm the lot on the plat, is just below.
See every listing on the map
The full La Verkin 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.
This filter too narrow?
Browse every La Verkin listing, or slide sideways: single story, mountain view, acreage.
If the grid looks thin today, that is the real market, not a glitch: in a town this size, true cul-de-sac listings genuinely run lean some weeks. 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 cul-de-sac homes mean in La Verkin.
A cul-de-sac is a small thing on paper, a street that dead-ends in a bulb instead of running through, but it changes how a home lives. The appeal is the traffic pattern: the only cars on the street belong to the homes on it, so there is very little through-traffic passing the front of the house. The second draw is the lot. The parcels around the bulb often fan out wider at the back, the pie-shaped lot, which can mean a larger or more private back yard than a standard mid-block home on the same street.
In La Verkin the cul-de-sacs are not spread evenly across town. They cluster in the newer, planned subdivisions on the benches, east and west of the center, where the streets were platted in loops and bulbs rather than a through grid. Bench neighborhoods like Woodland, where streets dead-end into open space, plus Quail Run, Zion View Estates, and Sunset View Estates carry most of them. The original 1898 orchard-block grid west of Main Street, by contrast, was laid out in long straight blocks, so a true cul-de-sac over there is the exception. If a quiet street is the whole point, that narrows the map before you ever open the gallery above.
Here is the local angle I make sure every buyer hears: the listing word and the plat map are not always the same thing. Some homes get tagged as a cul-de-sac when the street is really a short dead-end or a flag lot, and a true bulb does not automatically come with the wider pie-shaped lot. A cul-de-sac lot is confirmed parcel by parcel, on the plat and on the ground, not from the listing adjective. So before anyone gets attached, I check how the street actually ends and how the lot is shaped.
None of this is about who lives on the street, it is about the street pattern and the lot. Earlier in the process than "show me listings"? Start with the La Verkin guide or the cost of living section. When a home below reads right, that is the moment to call, and we will confirm the cul-de-sac and the lot shape before you fall for it.
Reading a cul-de-sac here
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How the street ends: a real cul-de-sac dead-ends in a bulb so no through-traffic passes. Confirm it is a true closed street, not a short dead-end or a flag lot the listing calls a cul-de-sac.
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Whether the lot is pie-shaped: bulb lots often fan out wider at the back, but not always. The plat tells you if this one actually has the bigger rear yard or just a standard footprint on a quiet street.
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Where it sits on the bulb: a lot dead-center at the end faces the most pavement and turnaround; one set off to the side reads differently. Walk the position before you decide.
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It is about the lot: a cul-de-sac is a street-pattern feature tied to where the home sits in the subdivision. Read the plat and the parcel, not the listing adjectives.
The local map
Where the cul-de-sacs actually are.
Cul-de-sacs follow the newer street plans, which in La Verkin means the planned subdivisions up on the benches that were platted in loops and bulbs. Here is where they concentrate, plus the part of town where a true cul-de-sac is the exception worth a second look.
Woodland
On the north side between SR-9 and the SR-17 corridor, Woodland's streets dead-end into open space, so quiet closed streets are part of how it was laid out. A first place to look for a cul-de-sac.
The east benches
Planned 2000s streets along the SR-9 climb in Quail Run, Zion View Estates, and Mesa Verde, laid out with interior loops, so cul-de-sac lots turn up here, several on sloped ground with framed views.
Crestview Village & Independence Point
Bench-top communities on quiet interior streets east and north of the center. Their loop layouts put homes on dead-ends and bulbs rather than on through-traffic.
Sunset View Estates
Rising from the valley floor on the west bench, its interior streets and dead-ends are part of the plan, with open valley views toward the Hurricane Cliffs from the outer lots.
The orchard-block old town
La Verkin Estates, Vintage Park Mesa, and the 1898 grid west of Main run in long straight blocks, so a true cul-de-sac there is the exception. If you find one, confirm on the plat the street really closes.
Where to read closely
No street is a guarantee from the listing word. When in doubt, start from all La Verkin listings and confirm the plat and the lot shape before you tour.
Before you tour: what to actually check
That the street truly closes: a real cul-de-sac dead-ends in a bulb. Confirm on the plat it is not a through-street, a short dead-end, or a flag lot the listing rounds up. This is the first thing to check.
Whether the lot is pie-shaped: bulb lots often widen at the back, but not always. The plat shows whether this one actually has the bigger rear yard or a standard footprint.
Where on the bulb it sits: a lot dead-center at the end faces the most pavement and the turnaround; one off to the side reads differently. Stand in the driveway and look.
Turnaround and parking: the bulb is shared turning and backing-up space. Look at how cars move and where guests park before deciding the position works for you.
What backs up to the lot: a cul-de-sac is quiet out front, but check what sits behind it, open space, a wash, the gorge rim, or more homes, since that drives privacy and value.
Drainage at the low point: a bulb can be where water collects in a desert downpour, more so on the benches and near the washes. Ask how the street drains and whether the lot sits at the low spot.
Want the quiet-street shortlist, with the lot already read?
Tell me the part of town and the budget, and I will send the La Verkin homes on a true cul-de-sac, with the plat and the lot shape checked so you know which ones actually have the wider yard and which just sit on a quiet street. That way you are looking at homes that match what you pictured, not guessing from a listing word.
Selling a La Verkin home on a cul-de-sac? The buyers reading this page are looking for exactly that quiet street. List it with me, Scott Buehler, and it gets featured across MovingUtah, on the pages they are already reading.
Quick answers
Cul-de-sac shopping, answered.
Two things, and both are about the street and the lot, not the neighbors. A cul-de-sac dead-ends in a bulb instead of running through, so the only cars on it belong to the homes on it and there is very little passing traffic out front. And the lots around the bulb often fan out wider at the back, the pie-shaped lot, which can mean a larger or more private rear yard than a standard mid-block home. On the benches above the gorge, that quiet-street-plus-bigger-yard combination is the draw.
In the newer, planned bench subdivisions, not the old town. The streets that climb the benches east and west of the center, places like Woodland, Quail Run, Zion View Estates, and Sunset View Estates, were platted in loops and dead-ends, so that is where the cul-de-sacs are. The original 1898 orchard-block grid west of Main Street runs in long straight blocks, so a true cul-de-sac there is the exception.
It can. A quiet closed street, and especially a wider pie-shaped lot at the bulb, are features buyers will pay a little for, so these can sit above a comparable mid-block home on the same street. Whole-home prices still cover the full La Verkin range, which runs a step below Hurricane, so the live listings above are the honest answer on any given week.
No, and that is worth checking. Lots around a bulb often widen at the back, but plenty are a standard footprint that just happens to sit on a quiet street. The plat is what tells you whether a given lot actually has the bigger rear yard or not, so confirm the shape parcel by parcel rather than assuming it from the cul-de-sac label.
Not on its own. Some homes get tagged as a cul-de-sac when the street is really a short dead-end or a flag lot, and a true bulb does not automatically come with the wider lot. A cul-de-sac is confirmed on the plat and on the ground, how the street actually ends and how the lot is shaped, not from the listing adjective. I check that before anyone gets attached.
Tell me the part of town and the budget, and I will flag La Verkin homes on a true cul-de-sac as they go live, with the plat and the lot shape read first. Pair that with a pre-approval and you can move on the right one before the weekend crowd does.