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Fruit Heights, Utah

Homes with Virtual Tours in Fruit Heights, Utah

Fruit Heights sits on the east bench of Davis County between Kaysville and Farmington, tucked against the Wasatch foothills with Baer Creek and the Bonneville Shoreline Trail running through town. It's a small community of roughly 6,000 residents, mostly single-family homes on larger lots than you'll see down on the valley floor, with a price range that typically runs from the mid $600s for older ramblers up past $1.5M for newer custom builds backing the foothills. Because inventory is thin and many buyers relocate here from out of state for jobs at Hill Air Force Base, the University of Utah, or downtown Salt Lake, virtual tours have become a practical filter rather than a novelty.

A virtual tour listing in Fruit Heights usually means a Matterport 3D walkthrough, a guided video, or a drone flyover showing the lot and mountain backdrop. That matters here specifically because lot topography varies wildly street to street — a home on Mountain Road sits very differently than one off Nicholls Road — and photos alone don't show grade, walkout basement potential, or how much of the Wasatch you actually see from the kitchen window. Out-of-state buyers relocating for Hill AFB or Davis School District placement lean on these tours to shortlist before flying in for a weekend of in-person showings. Browse the active listings below to see which Fruit Heights homes currently include a 3D tour or video walkthrough.

May 2026 · Fruit Heights market

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

Full Fruit Heights market report
Median sale
$698,000
5 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
14 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
99.7%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
22
active + pending

7 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About homes with virtual tours in Fruit Heights.

What type of virtual tour should I expect on Fruit Heights listings?

Most agents in Davis County use Matterport 3D walkthroughs, which let you click room-to-room and pull a dollhouse view of the floor plan. On higher-end Fruit Heights homes ($900K+), it's common to also see a produced video tour with drone footage showing the foothill setting and proximity to the Bonneville Shoreline Trail.

Are virtual tours common on Fruit Heights MLS listings?

They're more common here than in many small Utah cities because a meaningful share of buyers are relocating from out of state — Hill AFB transfers, remote workers, and families moving for Davis School District. Listing agents know a 3D tour shortens days on market, so you'll see them on a majority of homes priced above $700K and on most new construction.

Can a virtual tour replace an in-person showing in Fruit Heights?

For shortlisting, yes — a Matterport tour gives an honest read on layout, finishes, and condition. But Fruit Heights lots vary a lot in slope and view, and a tour won't show you afternoon sun on the patio, traffic noise from US-89, or how the irrigation ditch runs through the back. Plan to walk the property before writing an offer.

Do new construction homes in Fruit Heights have virtual tours?

Builders working the foothill lots often post a tour of the model or a completed spec, plus renderings for homes still under construction. If a home is mid-build, ask the listing agent for a walkthrough video of the actual unit rather than relying on the model tour, since finish packages and lot orientation differ.

How do I view a virtual tour on these listings?

Each MLS listing card below will show a 'Virtual Tour' link or icon when one is available — clicking it opens the Matterport, YouTube video, or branded tour page in a new window. If you don't see a link on a home you're interested in, your agent can request the unbranded tour directly from the listing brokerage.

Should I trust the photos and tour to reflect current condition?

Generally yes within the first 30 days of a listing, but tours shot months ago on a re-listed home can be stale. Check the listing date, and on any home built before 2000, ask for recent photos of the mechanical room, roof, and any basement finish work — the parts virtual tours tend to skip.