St. George
market reports.
Every monthly, quarterly, and year-end report for the St. George single-family market, in one place. Washington County MLS data, updated every month, read the way I would explain it to a neighbor. St. George is the regional market everyone watches, and these are the numbers behind the headlines.
Single-family figures, year over year. Source: Washington County Board of REALTORS MLS.
The two reports worth reading first.
The newest month for the freshest signal, and the latest quarter for the steadier trend. Start here, then go as deep as you want in the archive below.
Based on information from the Washington County Board of REALTORS® Multiple Listing Service for the period 4/1/2026 through 4/30/2026 (monthly), 1/1/2026 through 3/31/2026 (quarterly), and 1/1/2025 through 12/31/2025 (annual). Single-family figures. Information deemed reliable but not guaranteed.
Where St. George sits, and what it means if you are selling.
Each point is a published report's single-family median. The line fills in as new monthly reports are added. Annual and quarterly anchors are noted in the archive below.
Here is the honest read as of spring 2026. St. George closed 2025 with a single-family median of $589,990, up 3% on the year, on 1,528 sales. April 2026 printed $577,775, a 3% softening against a strong April 2025. Q1 2026 landed at $577,250, essentially flat against Q1 2025.
St. George is the largest single-family market in Washington County by a wide margin, so the citywide median absorbs a lot of mix shift. Inventory is essentially flat year over year (728 active homes against 730 a year ago), homes are still trading at 98% of list, and days on market sits at 62. That is a calm market, not a falling one.
What it means if you are selling: with builders active in Desert Color and Divario, and resale inventory steady from Little Valley to the Ledges, your pricing has to be sharper than it was in 2021. Buyers have choices. A strong launch price and real marketing are doing the work a frenzy used to do for free.
Utah Tech enrollment, builder activity in Desert Color and Divario, and snowbird demand from Bloomington to SunRiver all sit underneath these numbers. St. George counted roughly 108,847 residents in the most recent Kem C. Gardner Policy Institute estimate. The citywide median hides real differences between a Little Valley starter and a Ledges custom. Your street has its own story.
Every St. George report, newest first.
Grouped by year. Within each year, the quarter and year-end roll-ups sit up top, then every monthly report below.
2026
In progress2025
Complete yearThe St. George median moved 3% in a year. Did your home?
Maybe more, maybe less. A Bloomington patio home and a Ledges custom do not move at the same rate, and the citywide median cannot tell you which one you own. The valuation questionnaire can. Free, about three minutes, no signup wall.
Honest pricing band. No marketing list.
Where to go from the data.
Sell your St. George home
The full listing playbook for the St. George market. Pricing strategy, marketing, and the launch window that matters most.
St. George neighborhoods
The subdivision-level view, from Bloomington and SunRiver to Desert Color, Divario, and the Ledges, where the citywide median breaks into real streets.
Moving up in St. George
The equity math for trading a Bloomington patio home for a Ledges or Divario build, with one coordinator running both sides.
What is my St. George home worth?
The hyperlocal valuation page for St. George. Start the questionnaire and get an honest pricing band.
Market reports hub
Compare St. George to Cedar City, Washington, Hurricane, Ivins, and Santa Clara. Six markets, one read each.
Search St. George homes
The home search lives on MovingUtah.com. Browse active St. George listings and neighborhood pages.