Live La Verkin listings, filtered
Single-story homes in La Verkin.
Every home listed as one story on the La Verkin market, fed straight from the MLS and sorted newest first, with a local read on where the true single-level ramblers sit.
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- Single-story / rambler
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- La Verkin, UT
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- Local MLS, live
Want it narrower? Tell me your exact spec.
Newest first
The newest single-story listings.
Fed straight from the local MLS and filtered to homes listed as one story: new La Verkin listings appear here as they list, and sold homes drop off. The local read on where the true single-level homes are 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: mountain view, under $450K.
If the grid looks thin today, that is the real market, not a glitch: in a town this size, single-story 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 single-story homes mean in La Verkin.
On a Utah listing sheet, a single-story home is a rambler, what other parts of the country call a ranch. La Verkin is full of them. The rambler is the default home here, from the older ones on the deep orchard-block lots west of Main Street to the newer ones going up on the benches, so single-level living is less a niche search in this town than it is the mainstream.
The local wrinkle to know is the split-level. La Verkin's orchard-block subdivisions, the central streets built through the 1990s and 2000s, carry a lot of them. A split-level runs a few short flights of stairs between half-levels, but from the curb it can look just like a rambler. If what you want is one floor with no stairs at all, that is the distinction to check, because the two photograph almost the same.
Basements are the other thing buyers ask about. Plenty of La Verkin homes are true single-level on a slab, with nothing below grade. But the bench subdivisions sit on sloped ground, and some of those ramblers use the grade for a walkout basement, so a one-story listing on the benches can still have finished space downstairs. It is worth a look at the floor plan rather than an assumption either way.
On price, one-level living can run a little more per square foot, because the roof and foundation have to cover a wider footprint than the same square footage stacked into two stories. Whole-home prices still cover the full La Verkin range, which sits a step below Hurricane. 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.
What counts as single-story here
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True single-level: the whole house on one floor, no interior stairs to a second story. On a slab this is the common La Verkin build, and it is what most ramblers here are.
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Split-level: short flights between half-levels, common in the orchard blocks. It can photograph like a rambler, so verify the stories field before you count on one floor.
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Rambler over a walkout basement: one main level with stairs down to lower space, more common on the sloped bench lots. Verify it on the listing rather than assuming.
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Zero-step entry: a level, no-step path from the driveway or porch into the home. If that is the real spec you want, say so plainly and I will filter for it rather than guess from the photos.
The local map
Where the single-story homes actually are.
Because the rambler is the default La Verkin home, single-level living turns up in every part of town. Here is how it breaks down by area, plus the streets where a split-level is most likely to be hiding in plain sight.
Orchard-block old town
The older ramblers sit here, on the deep lots west of Main Street in La Verkin Estates and Vintage Park Mesa. Single-level homes from the 1970s through the 1990s on mature streets, with split-levels mixed in.
The east benches
Newer ramblers on the high ground along the SR-9 climb: Quail Run, Zion View Estates, and Mesa Verde, several on sloped lots that add a walkout basement below the main floor.
The west bench
Sunset View Estates rises from the valley floor with single-level and split-level homes oriented to the open views across Hurricane Valley to the cliffs.
The river bottoms
Ramblers under the cottonwood and willow canopy near the Virgin River in Riverwood Estates and Willow Cove, sheltered and green, a different feel from the open benches.
New construction
The active bench phases in Cottonwood Hollow and Sunset View Estates carry single-level floor plans. On a new build you can usually pick the one-story plan before the slab is poured.
Where to read closely
The orchard blocks carry the most split-levels in town, so if true one-level matters, read the stories field there especially. When in doubt, start from all La Verkin listings and filter down.
Before you tour: what to actually check
Stories field vs. photos: a split-level can photograph like a rambler. Check the listing's stories count and the floor plan, not just the front shot.
Walkout basement: on bench lots, confirm whether a "one-story" home has finished space downstairs, and whether that is what you want.
Zero-step entry: if a level, no-step path inside is the real goal, check it on site rather than trusting the listing photos.
Lot slope: a bench lot can mean steps up from the street or driveway even when the home itself is on one level.
Single-level footprint: a true rambler with the space you need sits on a wider footprint, so confirm the lot actually holds it.
Garage access: confirm the garage enters on the main floor without a step down, which matters most on the sloped bench lots.
Want the single-level shortlist without the homework?
Tell me the budget, the part of town, and whether you need true one-level with no stairs at all or just a main-floor primary. I read these La Verkin listings every week, and I will send the handful worth your Saturday, with straight answers about the split-levels that photograph like ramblers.
Selling a single-level home in La Verkin? The buyers reading this page are looking for exactly that. List it with me, Scott Buehler, and it gets featured across MovingUtah, on the pages they are already reading.
Quick answers
Single-story shopping, answered.
Often, but not always. Many La Verkin single-level homes are built on a slab with everything on one floor and nothing below grade. On the benches, though, some ramblers use the slope for a walkout basement, so a one-story listing can still have finished space downstairs. Read the stories field and the floor plan, and I am happy to read them with you.
A rambler is a true single-level home, all the main rooms on one floor. A split-level runs a few short flights of stairs between half-levels, and La Verkin's orchard-block subdivisions have a lot of them. They can photograph like a rambler from the street, so if you want one level with no stairs at all, check the listing's stories count rather than the front photo.
Across the whole town, because the rambler is the default La Verkin home. You find older single-level homes on the deep lots of the orchard-block old town, newer ramblers on the east and west benches, and more under the cottonwood canopy in the river bottoms. The live listings above are the fastest way to see what is on one floor right now.
One level can run a little more per square foot, because the roof and foundation span a larger footprint than the same space stacked into two stories. Whole-home prices still cover a wide range, and La Verkin runs a step below Hurricane either way, so the live listings are the honest answer on any given week.
Tell me the budget, the part of town, and whether you need true one-level with no stairs at all, 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.
Price, mostly. La Verkin is the value side of the Hurricane Valley, a step below Hurricane on price, so a single-level home here tends to give you more house, or a bigger lot, for the money. You are also a few minutes closer to Zion. The trade is a smaller town with less new-build scale, which plenty of buyers count as a plus.