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New Harmony, Utah

New Listings in New Harmony, Utah

New Harmony sits quietly in the upper end of the Virgin River Valley, tucked between the pine-covered ridges of Harmony Mountains to the west and the red-rock terrain that signals the start of Dixie country to the south. At roughly 5,400 feet elevation, it sits noticeably higher — and cooler — than St. George, about 30 miles down the road, giving residents four genuine seasons without the triple-digit summer heat that defines Washington County's lower basin. The town itself is small, with fewer than 300 residents, but its proximity to Zion National Park (roughly 25 miles east via Highway 17), Brian Head ski resort (under an hour north), and the outdoor corridor of Pine Valley makes it a serious candidate for buyers who want acreage, elbow room, and easy access to public lands without sacrificing a reasonable drive to St. George's full retail and medical infrastructure.

New listings in New Harmony tend to move at a slower pace than the frenetic St. George market, but inventory here is genuinely limited — the town is surrounded by federal and state land, which means buildable parcels don't turn over frequently. Most homes sit on half-acre to multi-acre lots, and equestrian-friendly properties with irrigation water shares and outbuildings are common. Price points typically range from the mid-$400,000s for modest single-family homes to well over $1M for larger custom ranches. Because new inventory is rare, checking back often matters — a property that appears today may be under contract within days. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market.

May 2026 · New Harmony market

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

Full New Harmony market report
Median sale
$2,300,000
3 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
284 days
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
112.7%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
13
active + pending

1 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About new listings in New Harmony.

How often do new homes come on the market in New Harmony?

New Harmony is a low-volume market — the town has only a few hundred homes total, so it's normal to see just one to four new listings in any given month. Setting up an alert through your agent is the most reliable way to catch them, since well-priced acreage properties here can go under contract within a week.

What price range should I expect on recent New Harmony listings?

Most new listings fall between roughly $650,000 and $1.4 million for homes on one to five acres, with custom builds on larger parcels or with full equestrian setups pushing higher. Older manufactured homes on land occasionally come in under $500K, and raw lots typically run $150K–$400K depending on acreage and water shares.

Do new listings here usually include water rights?

Many do, but it varies parcel by parcel. New Harmony has both culinary water through the town system and shares in the New Harmony Valley Irrigation Company for pasture and landscaping. Always confirm with the listing agent how many shares convey and whether the well, if any, is shared or private.

Is New Harmony a good fit for horse owners looking at new listings?

Yes — it's one of the more horse-friendly pockets in Washington County. Zoning allows livestock on most parcels, lots are large enough for arenas and pasture, and there's direct riding access toward Pine Valley and the BLM ground west of town. Watch new listings for existing barns, loafing sheds, and fenced pasture, since building those from scratch adds significant cost.

How far is New Harmony from St. George and Cedar City amenities?

St. George is about 25 miles south via I-15, putting the regional airport, Costco, and Intermountain Hospital roughly 25–30 minutes away. Cedar City sits 20 miles north with Southern Utah University and its own regional airport. That mid-point location is a big reason buyers from both directions watch this market.

Should I tour new listings in person or can I rely on photos?

Photos rarely capture the things that matter most here — slope of the land, well output, fencing condition, view corridors, and proximity to neighboring agricultural operations. Plan to walk the property, ideally with an agent who knows the area's water and septic quirks, before writing an offer.