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Hurricane, Utah

55+ Community Homes for Sale in Hurricane, Utah

Hurricane has quietly become one of Southern Utah's better values for active-adult buyers. Sitting at 3,250 feet on the south end of Washington County, it shares St. George's mild winters and 300-plus sunny days a year but typically runs noticeably lower on price per square foot. The 55+ neighborhoods cluster on the south and west sides of town — close to Sand Hollow Reservoir, the Sand Hollow and Coral Canyon golf courses, and a short hop down SR-9 to Zion National Park. Most homes are single-level with low-maintenance xeriscaped yards, attached two- or three-car garages (often with a golf-cart bay), and HOAs that handle front-yard landscaping so owners can lock the door and travel.

What sets Hurricane apart from neighboring Sun River or Bloomington Hills is the small-town pace and the proximity to outdoor recreation. Residents have Quail Creek and Sand Hollow within ten minutes for boating and paddleboarding, Gooseberry Mesa and JEM Trail for mountain biking, and roughly 35 minutes door-to-door to St. George Regional Hospital. The downtown grid still has its original 1860s Mormon-settlement bones, with newer retail and restaurants spreading along SR-9 and Telegraph. Clubhouses in the age-restricted neighborhoods generally include a pool, pickleball courts, and a fitness room, and several have organized hiking and travel groups. Browse the active 55+ listings below to see floor plans, HOA dues, and clubhouse amenities for what's currently on the market.

May 2026 · Hurricane market

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

Full Hurricane market report
Median sale
$518,000
37 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
48 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
98.9%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
478
active + pending

7 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About 55+ community homes in Hurricane.

Which 55+ communities exist in Hurricane?

Sun River St. George sits just over the line, but inside Hurricane proper the main age-restricted options have been Stone Cliff-adjacent developments and smaller pockets within Sky Ranch and Dixie Springs. Newer phases continue to come online as Hurricane's south side builds out toward Sand Hollow. Inventory shifts month to month, so the active listings below are the most current picture.

What does HOA typically cover in a Hurricane 55+ community?

Most age-restricted HOAs here run $150-$300/month and cover front-yard landscaping, the clubhouse, pool and pickleball courts, and common-area maintenance. Some include gated entry and basic cable. Always pull the CC&Rs during your due diligence period since rental rules and pet limits vary widely between communities.

How strict is the 55+ age requirement?

Under federal HOPA rules, at least one resident in 80% of homes must be 55 or older, and no one under 19 (sometimes 18) can live there permanently. Spouses under 55 are generally fine. Short visits from grandkids are allowed, but extended stays are usually capped at 30-90 days per year depending on the community.

What's the price range for 55+ homes in Hurricane right now?

Single-level homes in age-restricted neighborhoods typically run from the mid $400s for smaller 2-bed patio homes up to $700K+ for larger casitas with golf or red rock views. Hurricane generally runs 10-15% below comparable Sun River or Bloomington Hills pricing, which is a big part of the draw.

Why are retirees choosing Hurricane over St. George?

Lower price per square foot, quicker access to Sand Hollow Reservoir and Zion, and a quieter small-town feel. Hurricane Valley Hospital (Intermountain) is on the south end of town, and Quail Creek and Sand Hollow are both under 10 minutes from most subdivisions. You still get the same 300+ sunny days and mild winters as St. George.

Are these homes mostly single-level?

Yes. The vast majority of age-restricted product in Hurricane is single-story with no steps at the entry, 36-inch hallways, and curbless showers in the primary bath. Builders here design specifically for aging-in-place, which is one reason resale demand stays steady.