Homes with Virtual Tours in Woodland, Utah
Woodland sits in the Kamas Valley just east of Park City, tucked along the Provo River where Highway 35 climbs toward the Uinta Mountains. It's a small, rural community — think 5 to 40-acre parcels, horse setups, log and timber-frame homes, and second homes owned by folks who work in Salt Lake or Park City and want the quiet side of Summit and Wasatch County. Because the drive from the Wasatch Front runs 45 minutes to over an hour depending on weather, and because many shoppers here are out-of-state buyers relocating from California, Texas, or the Front Range, virtual tours have become genuinely useful in this market. A 3D walkthrough lets you see how a cabin's great room actually flows, where the wood stove sits, and how the loft is laid out before you commit to the drive up Browns Canyon or over Wolf Creek Pass.
Listings with virtual tours in Woodland tend to be the higher-end mountain homes — properties in the $1M to $4M+ range where sellers and listing agents invest in Matterport scans, drone flyovers of the acreage, and video tours that show the views toward the Uintas or down-valley toward Jordanelle. For buyers vetting properties remotely, these tours also help you gauge ceiling heights, finish quality, and whether a "rustic" listing means handcrafted log or just dated. Browse the active listings below to see which Woodland homes currently offer virtual walkthroughs.
December 2025 · Woodland market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in Woodland right now.
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Active listings
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Common questions
About homes with virtual tours in Woodland.
What kinds of virtual tours do Woodland listings typically include? ▾
Most commonly you'll see Matterport 3D walkthroughs, narrated video tours, and drone footage of the parcel and surrounding mountains. On larger acreage listings, the aerial footage matters as much as the interior tour because it shows fence lines, outbuildings, water features, and access to the property.
Why are virtual tours especially useful for Woodland buyers? ▾
A large share of Woodland buyers are out-of-state or live down on the Wasatch Front. With winter storms regularly closing or slowing Highway 35 and Wolf Creek Pass, scheduling in-person showings can take real planning. A solid virtual tour helps you shortlist before making the drive up from Salt Lake or flying into SLC.
Do most Woodland listings have virtual tours, or just the luxury ones? ▾
It skews toward the higher-end homes — typically listings above $1M where the marketing budget supports professional 3D scans and aerial video. Smaller cabins and land-only parcels often rely on still photos, though that's been changing as more agents adopt Matterport as standard.
Can a virtual tour replace an in-person showing in a rural area like Woodland? ▾
For narrowing the list, yes. For a final decision, no. Things that matter in Woodland — well output, septic condition, road access in winter, actual cell signal, how the wind moves through the canyon — don't come through on video. Plan at least one in-person visit before going under contract.
How can I tell if a Woodland listing's virtual tour is current? ▾
Check whether the tour shows the same season and finishes as the still photos, and ask your agent when the Matterport scan was captured. Some listings reuse tours from prior listing cycles, which can misrepresent recent updates or, on the flip side, hide deferred maintenance.
What should I look for in a virtual tour of a mountain home up here? ▾
Watch for ceiling beams and roof structure (key on snow-load country), the heating setup, window orientation toward views, and how the mudroom and garage handle wet gear. Drone footage should show the driveway grade and whether the home sits on a south-facing slope — a big deal for winter sun and snowmelt.