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Holladay, Utah

Homes with Virtual Tours in Holladay, Utah

Holladay has become one of the Salt Lake Valley's most-watched markets for out-of-state buyers, and virtual tours are a big reason why. Tucked between Big Cottonwood Canyon and I-215, this east-bench city of about 30,000 draws relocation buyers from California, Texas, and the Pacific Northwest who often write offers before ever setting foot in Utah. Listing agents here know that, so homes priced above roughly $800K — which is most of Holladay — routinely come with Matterport 3D walkthroughs, drone footage, and narrated video tours. For shoppers comparing Holladay Hills, the Walker Lane estates, and the streets around Cottonwood Mall's redevelopment, a tour saves a trip and helps narrow the list before flying in.

The homes themselves range from updated mid-century ranches on quarter-acre lots to custom new builds on flag lots backing up to Cottonwood Creek, with a healthy stock of 1990s-2000s two-stories in between. Virtual tours matter more here than in some Utah cities because Holladay floor plans vary wildly block to block — you'll see vaulted great rooms next to compartmentalized originals, finished walkout basements, and casitas added over the years. Seeing the actual flow on a 3D tour beats guessing from photos. Listings below include homes with virtual tours attached to the MLS record; browse the active set to see what's currently available, and reach out when you want to schedule an in-person showing or have us preview a property on your behalf.

May 2026 · Holladay market

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

Full Holladay market report
Median sale
$872,250
28 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
6 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
97.8%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
132
active + pending

48 matching · page 1 of 2

Active listings

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Common questions

About homes with virtual tours in Holladay.

Why do Holladay listings tend to have virtual tours?

Holladay sits in a higher price bracket than much of the Salt Lake Valley, with many homes between $800K and $3M+ along Walker Lane, Cottonwood Lane, and the east bench. Listing agents at that price point routinely invest in Matterport 3D scans, drone footage, and walkthrough video because a meaningful share of buyers are relocating from out of state or from California. A virtual tour lets those buyers shortlist before booking a flight to Salt Lake.

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

It varies by listing. Matterport-style 3D dollhouse tours are most common on luxury Holladay homes because they let you measure rooms and move through the floor plan at your own pace. You'll also see narrated agent walkthroughs and aerial drone footage, which is useful for the larger lots near Holladay Boulevard and the Cottonwood Creek corridor.

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

Yes, and it happens regularly with relocation buyers heading to Holladay for jobs at the U of U, Intermountain Health, or downtown SLC tech employers. Most write offers contingent on an in-person walkthrough or a thorough inspection. A 3D tour is great for layout and finish level, but it won't show you neighbor noise, light at different hours, or how steep a driveway feels in winter.

Do older Holladay homes have virtual tours too, or just new construction?

Both. Holladay has a wide mix — mid-century ranches in Holladay Hills, updated mid-1900s homes near Cottonwood Mall's redevelopment, and newer custom builds tucked along the east side. Sellers of remodeled vintage homes often commission tours specifically to showcase what the photos can't convey: ceiling heights, sightlines through opened-up floor plans, and basement layouts.

How close are these homes to the Cottonwood Canyons and downtown SLC?

Holladay's location is a big part of its appeal — roughly 15 minutes to downtown Salt Lake, 20 minutes to the SLC airport, and 20-30 minutes to the Big and Little Cottonwood ski resorts (Solitude, Brighton, Alta, Snowbird). That's why so many out-of-state buyers want a virtual tour first: they're comparing Holladay against Park City and the Avenues before flying in.

How current are the virtual tours on active listings?

Tours are produced when a home first hits the market, so they reflect the home's condition at listing time. If a property has been active for a few months or had a price change, the tour is still accurate for layout but ask your agent whether anything has changed — staging, paint, or minor updates can shift between the shoot and your showing.