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Weston, Utah

Homes with Virtual Tours in Weston, Utah

Weston is a small farming community in Franklin County, Idaho — yes, technically across the state line, but it pulls heavily from the northern Cache Valley market and shows up on Utah MLS searches because most buyers here commute toward Logan, Preston, or Tremonton. The town sits at about 4,800 feet, surrounded by working hay ground, cattle operations, and foothills running up toward the Bear River Range. Homes range from century-old farmhouses on multi-acre parcels to newer builds along Westside Highway and the quieter county roads west of town. Because inventory is thin and properties are spread out, the listings that include a 3D walkthrough or video tour tend to move faster — buyers can vet a place from Salt Lake or out of state before committing to the two-hour drive north.

Virtual tours are especially useful in a market like this because acreage matters as much as the house itself. A Matterport walkthrough shows the floor plan and condition, while drone footage (common on Weston listings) tells you how the home sits on its parcel, where the outbuildings and pasture lines fall, and what the views look like toward Oxford Peak. For buyers relocating from the Wasatch Front or coming from Idaho Falls and beyond, that combination cuts down on wasted trips. Browse the active listings below to see which Weston-area properties currently include a tour, and reach out when you're ready to schedule the in-person walk.

June 2026 · Weston market

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

Full Weston market report
Median sale
$640,000
1 closed in June 2026
Median DOM
listing → contract
Sale-to-list
98.5%
of final list price
Unsold inventory
6
active + pending

4 matching · page 1 of 1

Active listings

Common questions

About homes with virtual tours in Weston.

Why do virtual tours matter for Weston listings specifically?

Weston sits in Franklin County just over the Idaho line, roughly two hours north of Salt Lake City and 30 minutes from Logan. Most buyers shopping here are coming from the Wasatch Front, Cache Valley, or out of state, so a walkthrough video or 3D tour saves a long drive for a first look. It's especially useful for the acreage parcels and older farmhouses common in the area, where photos alone don't convey layout or land.

What kind of virtual tours will I see on these listings?

Expect a mix: Matterport 3D walkthroughs, Zillow-style interactive tours, drone flyovers (common for properties with land), and simple guided video walk-throughs. On rural Weston listings, drone footage is often the most useful piece because it shows fence lines, outbuildings, irrigation, and how the home sits on the parcel.

Are virtual tours common in a small market like Weston?

Less common than in St. George or Park City, but adoption has grown. Out-of-area listing agents and higher-priced properties (homes on 5+ acres, newer builds, anything over $500K) almost always include some form of tour now. Smaller homes under $300K sometimes still rely on photos only.

Can I make an offer based on a virtual tour alone?

Legally yes, and some out-of-state buyers do exactly that, especially on land-heavy Weston properties. Most agents recommend an in-person walk before removing your inspection contingency. A 3D tour shows layout and finish but won't pick up smells, road noise from US-91, or the actual feel of the lot.

How do I view the tour on a listing here?

Look for a play icon or 'Virtual Tour' link on the listing detail page, usually near the photo gallery. Matterport tours let you click through rooms and measure spaces; video tours play straight through. If a listing claims a tour but the link is missing, ask your agent — sometimes it's hosted on the brokerage site separately.

Does a virtual tour usually mean the home is priced higher?

Not really. In Weston the tour reflects the listing agent's marketing budget more than the home's value. You'll see them on $250K starter homes and on $900K horse properties alike. Use the tour as a screening tool, not a price signal.