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Garden City, Utah

Homes with Virtual Tours in Garden City, Utah

Garden City sits on the west shore of Bear Lake at roughly 5,900 feet, a two-and-a-half hour drive from Salt Lake City and even farther from the Wasatch Front suburbs where many Bear Lake buyers actually live. That distance is the whole reason virtual tours matter here. A huge share of the market is second-home and vacation-rental shoppers from Utah County, Davis County, southern Idaho, and out-of-state — people who can't easily make a Tuesday afternoon showing on Logan Road or up in Sweetwater. Walking a property in 3D from your kitchen table, before committing to the drive over Logan Canyon, saves a weekend and narrows the short list to homes actually worth seeing in person.

Listings with virtual tours in Garden City tend to skew toward the inventory most often bought sight-unseen: lakefront cabins on Bear Lake Boulevard, Sweetwater and Ideal Beach condos, Buttercup-area townhomes, and newer builds in The Reserve and Legacy Beach. Sellers and listing agents know the buyer pool is regional, so 3D walkthroughs, Matterport scans, and drone footage showing lake proximity have become close to standard on higher-end listings. The tours also help buyers gauge things photos hide — ceiling heights in A-frame cabins, how tight the loft stairs really are, parking for boats and trailers, and whether the "lake view" is actual water or rooftops. Browse the active listings below to see which Garden City homes currently include a virtual walkthrough.

May 2026 · Garden City market

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

Full Garden City market report
Median sale
$655,000
5 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
17 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
97.5%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
172
active + pending

97 matching · page 1 of 5

Active listings

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Common questions

About homes with virtual tours in Garden City.

Why are virtual tours especially useful for Garden City listings?

Most Garden City buyers live somewhere else — the Wasatch Front, Idaho, Las Vegas, or out of state — and they're shopping for a second home or cabin near Bear Lake. A 3D walkthrough lets them rule properties in or out before driving two-plus hours up Logan Canyon. It also helps during winter, when Highway 89 weather can make a quick showing trip impractical.

What kind of virtual tour should I expect on these listings?

Quality varies. Some agents post a Matterport 3D scan you can walk through room by room, others link to a narrated video, and a few just provide a slideshow labeled as a tour. The MLS field captures all of these, so check the listing itself to confirm what's actually included before planning your shortlist.

Do nightly-rental cabins typically have virtual tours?

Yes, more often than primary residences. Sellers of short-term rental properties usually already have professional photos and a Matterport scan because the cabin is marketed to vacation renters year-round. That existing media often gets repurposed when the home goes on the market.

Can a virtual tour replace an in-person visit at Bear Lake?

Not really. A 3D tour shows layout and finishes well, but it won't tell you how loud Bear Lake Boulevard sounds in July, how steep the driveway is in February, or whether the HOA dock has an open slip. Use the tour to narrow your list, then schedule a trip to walk the final two or three in person.

Are lakefront and lakeview homes more likely to have tours?

Generally yes. Higher-price listings in Sweetwater, Ideal Beach, and the Hodges Canyon area tend to invest in better marketing media. Entry-level condos and older A-frames closer to town are more hit-or-miss, so filtering by virtual tour may exclude some legitimate options worth a phone call.

How current are the tours on active listings?

Most are shot when the home first hits the market, so they reflect the property at listing date. If a home has been active for several months or went through a price reduction, ask the listing agent whether anything — furniture, finishes, recent updates — has changed since the tour was recorded.