Live La Verkin listings, filtered
No-HOA homes in La Verkin.
Homes with no association on the La Verkin market, fed straight from the MLS and sorted newest first, with a straight local read on where they are and the real tradeoffs.
This page's filter
- Filter
- No HOA
- Area
- La Verkin, UT
- Sort
- Newest first
- Feed
- Local MLS, live
Want it narrower? Tell me your exact spec.
Newest first
The newest no-HOA listings.
Fed straight from the local MLS and filtered to homes with no association: new La Verkin listings appear here as they list, and sold homes drop off. The local read on where these homes are and what no association really means 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, acreage, RV parking.
If the grid looks thin today, that is the real market, not a glitch: in a town this size, no-association listings can 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 no-HOA homes mean in La Verkin.
No association is a real draw in La Verkin, and it is worth being clear about what it actually buys you. With no association there is no board and no monthly dues, and the rules about your own property get a lot shorter. You can park the RV, the boat, or the trailer, build a shed, and paint your front door any color you like without asking anyone. The tradeoff is that no one enforces neighborhood upkeep and there are no shared amenities, so the maintenance, the landscaping, and the look of the place all land on you and your neighbors individually.
Where you find these homes follows a pattern that fits the town's history. La Verkin grew out of a 1898 orchard-block grid west of Main Street, and a lot of that old town, plus many of the established bench streets above the valley, predate the association era and carry no dues. The places where an association is more likely are the newer phases and the attached-home developments. So in practice, a no-association home in La Verkin usually means an older property on a deep orchard-block lot like La Verkin Estates or Vintage Park Mesa, or a settled bench street, rather than a brand-new subdivision build.
The honest version of the freedom: yes, you skip the dues and most of the rules, but you carry all of the upkeep, and there are no community amenities to lean on. And no association is not the same as no rules at all. City and county zoning still applies, and a property can carry recorded deed restrictions even with no association, so what you can build or park is not always wide open. That is the part buyers miss most, and it is the part worth checking before you fall for the freedom.
The other thing to know is that the absence is not always obvious from the listing. The only way to be sure is the title work and the recorded documents on the parcel. 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 I will read the title and the deed with you before you get attached.
What no association means
-
More freedom on your property: park the RV, the boat, or the trailer, put up a shed, paint the door your color. Fewer rules about what you do on your own land.
-
No monthly dues: nothing to carry every month for a board. What the home costs to own tracks the home itself, not a budget set by others.
-
You maintain everything: no enforced neighborhood upkeep and no shared amenities. The look of the street and the upkeep land on owners individually.
-
Verify on title: the absence is not always obvious, so confirm it through the title work and recorded documents on the parcel, not just the listing.
The local map
Where the no-HOA homes actually are.
No-association homes follow the older, more established parts of town, not the newest phases. Here is where they concentrate, plus the parts of La Verkin where an association is more likely to be part of the deal.
Orchard-block old town
The 1898 grid west of Main Street, with deep lots and mature trees in La Verkin Estates and Vintage Park Mesa. Older homes here predate the association era, so this is the heart of the no-dues search.
More old-town streets
Established central streets in Orchard Springs and Pheasant Glen tend to be no-association on settled lots. Read each listing closely, since pockets can differ block to block.
Established benches
Many of the older bench streets above the valley carry no association either. The newer bench phases are more likely to, so on the high ground it is worth confirming the status parcel by parcel.
The river bottoms
Older homes under the cottonwood canopy near the Virgin River in Riverwood Estates often skip the association too. As always, the recorded documents are the real answer for any one lot.
Newer phases & attached homes
The newest bench phases and the attached-home developments are where an association is most likely. If a no-association home is the goal, these are the areas to expect dues, not skip them.
Where to read closely
No street is a guarantee either way, so the listing word is a starting point, not proof. When in doubt, start from all La Verkin listings and verify the status on the parcel before you tour.
Before you tour: what to actually check
Confirm there is truly no association: a listing can be wrong or vague. Verify through the title work that the property is not part of any association before you count on it.
Read the deed for restrictions: a property can carry recorded deed restrictions even with no association. They can limit what you build or park just like a board would.
Check city and county zoning: La Verkin and Washington County ordinances on setbacks, outbuildings, and front-yard parking still apply. No association does not mean no say.
RV, boat, or shed plans: if that is the reason for no association, confirm the lot, the setbacks, and the zoning actually allow it before you buy.
Plan for the upkeep: with no shared maintenance, every repair and every bit of yard work is yours. Budget for what a community would otherwise handle.
Look at the neighbors: with no enforced standard, the street can vary a lot. Drive it at different times so you know the surroundings you are buying into.
Want the no-HOA shortlist without the homework?
Tell me the budget, the part of town, and what you want the freedom for, whether that is RV parking, a shed, a bigger lot, or just no monthly dues. I read these La Verkin listings every week, and I will send the handful worth your Saturday, plus read the title and the deed so you know what no association really gets you before you fall for it.
Selling a La Verkin home with no association? 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.
Quick answers
No-HOA home shopping, answered.
Mostly the older orchard-block old town west of Main Street and a lot of the established bench streets, where homes predate the association era and carry no dues. The newer or attached developments are where an association is more likely. So in La Verkin a no-association home usually means an older property or one on a settled bench lot rather than a brand-new subdivision build. The live listings above are the fastest way to see what is on the market right now.
It means there is no board, no monthly dues, and far fewer rules about what you do on your own property. You can park the RV or the boat, put up a shed, and paint the front door any color you like. The flip side is that no one enforces neighborhood upkeep and there are no shared amenities, so the landscaping, the repairs, and the look of the place all land on you and your neighbors individually. It is more freedom and more responsibility at the same time.
More often than the old town, yes. The newer bench phases and the attached-home developments are where a community association is most likely, and the older orchard-block streets are where you tend to find no-association homes. There is no clean line, though, so it is not safe to guess from how new a street looks. Read each listing closely and confirm the status on the specific parcel rather than the neighborhood.
Do not take the listing's word for it. A listing can be wrong or vague, so the real answer is in the title work and the recorded documents for the parcel. The title company can confirm whether the property is part of any association and pull any recorded restrictions tied to it. I am happy to order and read those with you before you get attached, so you know exactly what you are buying and what you are not.
The pros are real freedom and no monthly dues: room to park your toys, build a shed, and run your own yard the way you want. The cons are that all of the upkeep is yours, there are no shared amenities, and with no enforced standard the street can vary house to house. No association is also not the same as no rules at all, because city and county zoning still apply, plus any recorded deed restrictions. Weigh the freedom against the responsibility before you decide.
Tell me the budget, the part of town, and what you want the freedom for, whether that is RV parking, a shed, a bigger lot, or just no monthly dues, and I will flag matching no-association 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.