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Bloomington, Utah

Homes with Virtual Tours in Bloomington, Utah

Bloomington sits on the south side of St. George along the Virgin River, about 15 minutes from the Utah-Arizona line and roughly two hours from Las Vegas. It's one of the original master-planned communities in Washington County, dating to the early 1970s, and today it's a mix of original ranch-style homes, updated mid-century remodels, and newer builds tucked around the Bloomington Country Club golf course. Because a large share of buyers here are relocating from out of state — retirees from California, second-home owners from the Wasatch Front, snowbirds from the Pacific Northwest — virtual tours have become close to a baseline expectation rather than a nice-to-have. Filtering for listings with a 3D walkthrough or video tour cuts the search down to the homes you can actually evaluate before booking a flight into SGU.

The practical value goes beyond convenience. Bloomington's housing stock varies wildly in condition: a 1976 home that still has original cabinetry sits next door to a fully gutted remodel asking twice as much. A Matterport scan tells you in five minutes which camp a listing falls into, and drone footage shows whether the lot backs to the river trail, the golf course, or a neighbor's RV pad. Median sale prices here generally run from the mid-$500s for original-condition homes to well above $1M for renovated properties with views of Pine Valley Mountain. Browse the active listings below to see which Bloomington homes currently include virtual tours.

April 2026 · Bloomington market

Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Bloomington right now.

Full Bloomington market report
Median sale
$423,001
1 closed in April 2026
Median DOM
19 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
98.8%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
3
active + pending

4 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About homes with virtual tours in Bloomington.

Why do so many Bloomington listings include virtual tours?

Bloomington draws a heavy share of out-of-state buyers from Las Vegas, California, and the Wasatch Front who can't easily drive down for every showing. Listing agents here have leaned into 3D Matterport tours and video walkthroughs for years because a serious portion of offers come in sight-unseen or after only one in-person visit. It's become close to a standard expectation on anything above the $500K mark.

What kind of virtual tour should I expect — 3D walkthrough or just a video?

Most Bloomington listings labeled with a virtual tour use Matterport or Zillow 3D Home, which let you click room-to-room and measure spaces. Higher-end homes near the Bloomington Country Club golf course or along the Virgin River bluff often include both a Matterport scan and a separately produced cinematic video with drone footage of the red rock surroundings.

Can I make an offer in Bloomington based on a virtual tour alone?

Yes, and plenty of buyers do — especially second-home and retirement buyers relocating from out of state. We typically recommend pairing the virtual tour with a FaceTime walkthrough with your agent and a thorough inspection contingency. Bloomington has a mix of 1970s-era original homes and newer builds, so condition varies more than the photos suggest.

Do virtual tours show the yard, pool, and views?

Interior Matterport scans usually stop at the back door, so outdoor spaces are covered by photos or drone video instead. This matters in Bloomington because lot orientation, Pine Valley Mountain views, and proximity to the river trail can swing value significantly. Ask the listing agent for additional drone footage if the tour feels interior-heavy.

Are virtual tours available on Bloomington's older 1970s and 80s homes too?

Increasingly, yes. Original Bloomington homes in the Man O War and Navajo areas used to get photo-only listings, but most agents now add at least a basic 3D scan since these properties often need renovation budgeting that buyers want to estimate remotely. If a listing in this price tier lacks a tour, it's worth asking why.

How current are the virtual tours on active listings?

Tours are almost always shot within a week of the listing going live, so what you see reflects the current condition. One thing to watch: if a home has been on the market more than 60 days, finishes or staging may have changed without the tour being updated. Confirm with the listing agent before flying in.