Homes with Virtual Tours in Huntsville, Utah
Huntsville sits in the Ogden Valley about 20 minutes east of Ogden, tucked between Pineview Reservoir, Snowbasin, Powder Mountain, and Nordic Valley. Because so many buyers shopping here live somewhere else — Salt Lake commuters, California transplants, second-home shoppers from out of state, ski-season regulars who only visit a few weeks a year — listings with full virtual tours get a lot more serious attention than drive-by walkthroughs. A good 3D tour or video walkthrough lets you check ceiling heights in a Trappers Crossing cabin, see how a Wolf Creek home actually flows, or confirm whether that Eden-adjacent ranch has the mudroom space you need for ski gear, all before booking a flight into SLC.
The homes shown here all include some form of virtual media — Matterport 3D scans, Zillow 3D walkthroughs, agent-produced video tours, or aerial drone footage. Inventory in the Huntsville area ranges from older valley farmhouses on an acre or two, to newer mountain-modern builds above $1.5M near the resorts, to townhomes and condos closer to the reservoir. Virtual tours are especially helpful in winter, when snowpack hides landscaping, driveways, and outbuildings that matter once spring hits. They're also useful for confirming whether a "valley view" actually looks at the Wasatch or just at the neighbor's roofline. Browse the active listings below to see which Huntsville-area homes currently have virtual tours attached, and reach out if you'd like an agent to walk a property over FaceTime for anything the tour doesn't cover.
May 2026 · Huntsville market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Huntsville right now.
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Common questions
About homes with virtual tours in Huntsville.
What kind of virtual tours do Huntsville listings usually include? ▾
Most fall into one of three buckets: Matterport-style 3D walkthroughs you can navigate room to room, agent-narrated video tours, and drone/aerial footage showing the lot and surrounding Ogden Valley terrain. Higher-end listings near Snowbasin and Powder Mountain often include all three plus a dedicated property website.
Why are virtual tours more common on Huntsville listings than in some other Utah towns? ▾
A big chunk of Ogden Valley buyers are out-of-state — Bay Area, Southern California, Texas, and Front Range Colorado are common. Listing agents know remote buyers won't fly in for a first showing, so 3D tours and video have become close to standard on anything over about $700K.
Can I rely on a virtual tour alone to make an offer? ▾
For a primary residence, almost no one does — but for second homes and cabins it happens regularly in Huntsville, often paired with a live FaceTime walkthrough by a buyer's agent. Just plan on a thorough inspection contingency, since tours can't show roof condition, crawlspace issues, or how the heating system actually performs at 5,000+ feet of elevation.
Do virtual tours show the surrounding land and views? ▾
Usually yes. Drone footage is common on rural Huntsville parcels because the lot itself — pasture, water rights, treelines, proximity to Pineview — is often as important as the house. If a listing doesn't include aerial shots, ask the listing agent; many have the footage but didn't attach it to the MLS.
How current are the virtual tours on active listings? ▾
Tours are generally shot when the home first goes on the market, so they reflect that season. A home listed in October may show fall colors and bare ground; the same property in February looks completely different under three feet of snow. If seasonal conditions matter to you, ask for recent photos.
What should I look for in a Huntsville virtual tour specifically? ▾
Pay attention to mudroom and gear storage, garage depth for trucks and ski racks, window orientation (south-facing matters in winter), and whether the driveway grade looks manageable when iced over. Also check for woodstoves or secondary heat sources — power outages happen in the valley during heavy storms.