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Kamas, Utah

Homes with Virtual Tours in Kamas, Utah

Kamas sits at about 6,500 feet at the base of the Uinta Mountains, roughly 20 minutes east of Park City via Highway 248 and about 50 minutes from Salt Lake City International. It's ranch country turning into recreation country — the Kamas Valley still has working hay fields and cattle operations, but you'll see custom homes on five-acre parcels, cabin-style builds near Jordanelle, and newer construction in subdivisions like Skyridge and Wohali. For out-of-state buyers, second-home shoppers, and Park City locals priced into Kamas, a virtual tour matters more here than in most Utah markets. Listings move quickly in peak season, winter storms can shut down a weekend showing trip, and many buyers are flying in from California, Texas, or the East Coast trying to narrow a shortlist before they ever land at SLC.

Homes tagged with virtual tours on the Kamas MLS typically include either a Matterport 3D walkthrough, a guided video, or aerial drone footage — useful when you're trying to gauge how a 3-acre lot sits against the Uintas or how far the nearest neighbor actually is. Price points in Kamas range widely, from sub-$700K townhomes near Main Street to $3M+ acreage estates in Woodland and Francis just south. A solid virtual tour helps separate the listings worth a plane ticket from the ones that photograph better than they live. Browse the active listings below to see which Kamas properties currently include a virtual walkthrough.

May 2026 · Kamas market

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

Full Kamas market report
Median sale
$753,700
13 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
17 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
97.5%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
96
active + pending

90 matching · page 2 of 4

Active listings

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Common questions

About homes with virtual tours in Kamas.

What kind of virtual tours do Kamas listings usually include?

Most are Matterport 3D walkthroughs that let you click room to room and measure spaces, though higher-end Kamas listings often add drone footage to show acreage, mountain views, and proximity to the Uintas. Some agents also post narrated video tours. The listing detail page will show which format is attached.

Why are virtual tours especially useful for Kamas home shopping?

A large share of Kamas buyers are out-of-state or relocating from the Wasatch Front, and winter weather between November and April can make in-person trips tricky. A 3D tour lets you vet a property before committing to the drive up Parleys or a flight into SLC. It also helps gauge how a home sits on its lot — important on the larger acreage parcels common around Kamas, Oakley, and Francis.

Do virtual tours replace an in-person showing in a market like Kamas?

No — they're a screening tool. Things like well water pressure, road noise from Highway 32, snow load on the driveway, and how cell service holds up are all things you only learn on site. Most serious buyers use the tour to cut a list of ten down to two or three worth visiting.

Are new construction homes in Kamas subdivisions like Skyridge typically shown with virtual tours?

Often yes, especially for completed spec homes and model units. Builders in Skyridge, Wohali, and the Jordanelle-side developments commonly publish 3D tours of their floor plans so buyers can walk a layout before construction finishes. Custom builds under contract usually rely on renderings and floor plans instead.

Can I see the surrounding land and views in a virtual tour, or just the interior?

It depends on the listing. Matterport scans are interior-focused, but many Kamas agents pair them with drone video that captures the full lot, mountain backdrop, and neighboring parcels. For acreage properties this matters — ask your agent to request additional drone footage if it isn't already posted.

How current are the virtual tours on active Kamas listings?

They're typically shot within a week or two of the home going live on the MLS, so they reflect the current condition. If a listing has been on the market for several months with seasonal changes — say a summer tour viewed in January — ask the listing agent for updated photos showing the property under snow.