Golf Course Homes for Sale in Washington, Utah
Washington sits just east of St. George along I-15, and golf is a year-round sport here thanks to the Mojave-edge climate — summer highs push past 100°F but winters rarely dip below freezing for long, so the fairways stay green from January through December. The two courses driving most on-course home searches inside city limits are Green Spring Golf Course, a Cary Bickler design carved through black lava rock and red sandstone, and Coral Canyon Golf Course up off Exit 13, designed by Keith Foster with wider corridors and big Pine Valley Mountain backdrops. Homes along these fairways range from 1990s-era patio homes in the low-to-mid $600Ks up to custom builds north of $1.5M on premium view holes.
Buyers chasing a fairway lot in Washington tend to fall into two camps: retirees and snowbirds who want to walk out the back gate to the cart path, and families who like the open green-belt feel even if they don't golf much themselves. Either way, the lifestyle pieces line up — St. George Regional Airport is 15 minutes away, Zion's south entrance is about 45 minutes, and Sand Hollow Reservoir is a 20-minute drive for boating. HOA structures, lot orientation relative to errant tee shots, and whether the home backs to a tee box or a green all matter more here than buyers expect. Browse the active golf course listings below to see what's currently on the market in Washington.
May 2026 · Washington market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Washington right now.
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Common questions
About golf course homes in Washington.
Which golf courses in Washington have homes built along the fairways? ▾
Green Spring Golf Course off Telegraph Street is the main one inside Washington city limits, with homes lining most holes and views back toward Pine Valley Mountain. Coral Canyon Golf Course on the north end also has fairway lots, and many buyers also look just across the line at Sky Mountain in Hurricane or Sunbrook and Sunriver in St. George since they're all 10–20 minutes away.
How much more do golf course homes cost compared to standard homes in Washington? ▾
Expect roughly a 10–20% premium for a true on-course lot versus a comparable interior-subdivision home, with the biggest jumps on holes that have mountain or red rock views behind them. Entry-level fairway homes at Green Spring tend to start in the upper $600Ks, while larger custom homes on Coral Canyon can run well past $1M.
Do HOA fees usually include golf membership? ▾
No. Green Spring and Coral Canyon are both public courses, so homeowners pay greens fees or buy a punch pass like anyone else. HOA dues in these neighborhoods typically cover common-area landscaping and sometimes a community pool, not golf access.
Is errant golf ball damage a real concern on these lots? ▾
It depends on the hole. Lots along the tee box side or behind the green see very few balls, while homes on the slice side of a long par 4 can take regular hits. Most builders in Green Spring and Coral Canyon installed tempered glass on exposed windows, and sellers should disclose any history of damage.
Can I play golf year-round in Washington? ▾
Yes. Washington sits at about 2,700 feet elevation with roughly 255+ sunny days a year, so both Green Spring and Coral Canyon stay open all 12 months. Winter mornings can hit freezing, but afternoons in January and February routinely climb into the 50s and 60s, which is exactly why so many snowbirds buy here.
Are short-term rentals allowed in Washington's golf communities? ▾
Generally no for nightly rentals — Washington City restricts STRs to specific zones, and neither Green Spring nor Coral Canyon are nightly-rental approved. Long-term rentals of 30 days or more are usually fine, but always confirm with the HOA and city before buying for investment purposes.