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Toquerville, Utah

New Listings in Toquerville, Utah

Toquerville sits just off I-15 between Hurricane and La Verkin, about 20 minutes north of St. George and 35 minutes from Zion National Park's main gate. It's a small town — under 2,000 residents — with a rural character that's increasingly rare in Washington County. New listings here tend to move quickly because inventory is thin: on any given week there may only be a handful of active properties, ranging from older homes on large irrigated lots in the historic core to newer builds in subdivisions like Westfield Estates and the hillside parcels along Toquerville Falls Road. Land is part of the appeal, and many listings include half-acre to multi-acre lots with water shares, fruit trees, or room for horses and outbuildings.

Price points run wide. Entry-level homes occasionally surface in the upper $400s, while custom homes with red rock views, larger acreage, or proximity to Toquerville Falls can list well above $1M. Buyers watching new listings here are usually weighing Toquerville against Hurricane, Washington, or Ivins — the trade-off is fewer services in town (no grocery store, limited dining) in exchange for quieter streets, darker night skies, and Pine Valley Mountain views to the north. Washington County School District serves the area, with kids typically attending schools in LaVerkin and Hurricane. Because turnover is low, setting up saved searches and acting fast on fresh listings matters more here than in larger markets. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market in Toquerville.

May 2026 · Toquerville market

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

Full Toquerville market report
Median sale
$614,397
4 closed in May 2026
Median DOM
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
96.5%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
23
active + pending

5 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About new listings in Toquerville.

How often do new listings come on the market in Toquerville?

Toquerville is a small market — typically only a few homes hit the MLS each month, and during slow seasons a week or two may pass with no new activity. Setting up an automated alert is the most practical way to catch new listings before they go under contract, since well-priced homes here often see offers within the first week.

What price range should I expect for new Toquerville listings?

Most new listings fall between roughly $500,000 and $1.2M, with the lower end being older homes on smaller lots and the upper end covering custom builds with acreage, views, or water rights. True fixer-uppers under $450,000 are rare but do appear a few times a year.

Do new listings in Toquerville usually include water shares or irrigation?

Many do, especially properties in the older parts of town along Toquerville Creek. Irrigation water from the Toquerville Secondary Water system is a meaningful value-add for anyone wanting pasture, orchards, or a large garden. Always confirm shares are deeded with the property and ask about annual assessments.

Are new construction homes common in Toquerville?

There is some new construction, particularly in Westfield and a few smaller subdivisions on the west side of town, but Toquerville hasn't seen the large-scale builder activity that Hurricane and Washington have. Most new listings are resale homes rather than spec builds.

How does Toquerville compare to nearby Hurricane or La Verkin for buyers?

Toquerville sits at a slightly higher elevation (around 3,400 feet) than St. George, which means summer temps run a few degrees cooler. It's quieter and more rural than Hurricane, with no commercial strip, so buyers trade convenience for privacy and larger lots. La Verkin is the closest town for groceries and gas.

Should I tour new Toquerville listings in person or is virtual enough?

Given how varied the terrain is — some lots are flat and irrigated, others are steep with lava rock — an in-person walk is worth the trip. Views, road access, and how the property sits relative to neighbors vary a lot from one street to the next, and photos rarely capture it accurately.