Homes with Virtual Tours in Salt Lake City, Utah
Virtual tours have become standard equipment on Salt Lake City listings, especially for buyers relocating from out of state for jobs at the University of Utah, Intermountain Health, Goldman Sachs' downtown campus, or the Silicon Slopes corridor stretching south toward Lehi. A 3D walkthrough lets you judge how an Avenues Victorian's narrow staircase actually feels, whether a Sugar House bungalow's basement is truly finished or just framed, and how a Federal Heights split-level handles the grade change off the street — things flat photos consistently misrepresent. Given that SLC's housing stock ranges from 1890s brick cottages to 2020s infill townhomes within a few blocks of each other, the ability to walk through before booking a flight saves real time and money.
The listings on this page all include some form of interactive tour — Matterport, iGuide, Zillow 3D, or a structured video walkthrough. Quality varies, so pay attention to whether the tour includes a measurable floor plan and covers the basement, garage, and yard, not just the staged main level. Salt Lake City's microclimates also matter: a home in the Avenues sits a few hundred feet higher than one in Liberty Wells, which affects views, snow load, and even commute patterns to downtown. Use the tours to short-list, then plan an in-person visit or a live video walk with a local agent before writing an offer. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market.
May 2026 · Salt Lake City market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Salt Lake City right now.
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Common questions
About homes with virtual tours in Salt Lake City.
What kind of virtual tour should I expect on a Salt Lake City listing? ▾
Most active SLC listings use either a Matterport 3D walkthrough, a Zillow/CubiCasa interactive floor plan, or an agent-narrated video walkthrough. Matterport is the most common on homes above roughly $600K because it lets you measure rooms and move through the floor plan room by room. Older or lower-priced listings sometimes only include a video slideshow set to music, which is less useful for serious evaluation.
Are virtual tours reliable enough to make an offer without seeing the home in person? ▾
Out-of-state buyers relocating for jobs at the U of U, Intermountain Health, or downtown tech employers do this regularly, especially in tight inventory months. A good 3D tour shows layout and condition, but it won't catch slope issues in benches neighborhoods like the Avenues or foundation cracks in older Sugar House bungalows. Most buyers pair the virtual tour with a local agent doing a live FaceTime walkthrough before writing.
Which Salt Lake City neighborhoods tend to have the best virtual tours? ▾
Higher-end areas — the Avenues, Federal Heights, Harvard-Yale, Millcreek, and new construction in Daybreak-adjacent west side pockets — almost always include full 3D tours. Entry-level homes in Glendale, Rose Park, and Poplar Grove are hit-or-miss. If a listing in those areas lacks a tour, it's worth asking the listing agent if one is coming before the next open house.
Does a virtual tour replace the in-person walkthrough during the due-diligence period? ▾
No. Utah's standard REPC gives you a due-diligence window to inspect the property, and lenders still require an appraiser to physically visit. The virtual tour is a screening tool — it helps you decide which homes are worth a Saturday afternoon drive from the airport or a trip up from St. George.
Why do some SLC listings skip the virtual tour entirely? ▾
A few reasons: tenant-occupied homes where the seller doesn't want interior media public, probate or estate sales handled quickly, and some pocket-listing situations on the east bench. In a balanced market, listings without tours tend to sit a few days longer, so sellers in 2024-2025 are adding them more often than they did pre-pandemic.