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Cedar City Listing Specialist

Sell your home
in Cedar City
by someone who lives here.

I moved here twenty years ago and never left. I list homes the way most agents in this market still do not. Cinematic media, a Coming Soon window, full agent network activation, and a digital campaign built for the buyers who actually shop Cedar City.

20+
Years living in Cedar City
~5,800
Feet of elevation, four real seasons
2
Active licenses: real estate & mortgage
8
Marketing pillars on every listing
No exceptions.

Brokered by Real Broker LLC. Mortgage services through Guild Mortgage, NMLS 1794818.

Cedar City Snapshot

A market most agents are not from.

Cedar City runs on a different clock than St. George. The university, the Shakespeare Festival, snowbirds escaping the desert heat in summer, and locals trading up inside town. Knowing which pocket your home sits in matters more than any city-wide average.

20 years here
Local agent, local lender

I have walked these neighborhoods for two decades. I know which streets get the afternoon sun and which ones see the snow plow first. That stuff shows up in the listing copy.

4 buyer types
SUU, snowbirds, locals, and investors

Cedar City is not one buyer pool. Faculty hires, retirees fleeing St. George heat, in-town move-ups, and parents buying near campus all want a different version of your home story.

9% of agents
Use true listing video. I am in that 9%.

Cinematic walkthrough, drone over the foothills, twilight, social cuts. Standard on every Cedar City listing, not an upsell. Source: NAR Profile of Buyers and Sellers.

Cedar City by the numbers

A balanced market,
not a soft one.

The last twelve months in Cedar City tell a clear story. More homes hit the market. More homes closed. Sold dollar volume jumped fifteen percent. Prices held basically flat, and well-prepared listings still hit ninety-nine percent of list price. The one shift worth flagging: homes are taking a couple of weeks longer to go under contract than they were a year ago. That is what a more balanced market looks like, not a softening one.

Scope

Cedar City single-family residential. Trailing twelve months ending May 13, 2026, compared against the prior twelve months. Source: Iron County Board of Realtors MLS via FlexMLS.

Closed sales
657 +15%

Single-family homes closed in Cedar City over the trailing twelve months. Up from 569 the prior year.

Median sale price
$460k +2%

Up from $449,900. Modest, steady appreciation. Not the heat of 2021, not a correction either.

Percent of list price
99% Flat YoY

Cedar City sellers are still getting paid. A correctly priced home leaves almost nothing on the table.

Active inventory
1,165 +20%

More homes on the market than a year ago. Means buyers have more to choose from. Means your listing needs to stand out from day one.

Median days on market
77 +12 days YoY

Days from list date to under contract, median. Up from 65 last year. Homes are taking a couple more weeks to find a buyer. More inventory means buyers shop longer.

Sold dollar volume
$320M +15%

Closed dollar volume in Cedar City single-family. Up from $276M. Real money still moving through this market.

The honest read

Sales up, inventory up, prices flat, homes sitting a touch longer.

If you have been waiting for the market to give you a signal, this is the signal. Cedar City is moving. More homes are listed, more are closing, sellers still hit ninety-nine percent of list. The catch is that homes are taking about twelve days longer to go under contract than they were a year ago. That is not alarming. That is the natural result of more inventory giving buyers more to compare. The first two weekends still matter. The pricing band still matters. The media still matters. That is the whole job.

A reminder: city-wide averages do not tell you what your home is worth. Old Sorrel new construction trades on a different curve than a 1990s ranch in Cross Hollows. For your specific number, request a valuation below.

The honest read

Sales up, inventory up, prices flat, homes sitting a touch longer.

If you have been waiting for the market to give you a signal, this is the signal. Cedar City is moving. More homes are listed, more are closing, sellers still hit ninety-nine percent of list. The catch is that homes are taking about twelve days longer to go under contract than they were a year ago. That is not alarming. That is the natural result of more inventory giving buyers more to compare. The first two weekends still matter. The pricing band still matters. The media still matters. That is the whole job.

A reminder: city-wide averages do not tell you what your home is worth. Old Sorrel new construction trades on a different curve than a 1990s ranch in Cross Hollows. For your specific number, request a valuation below.

Five Cedar City market truths

What the MLS actually says,
if you read all of it.

Most agents quote one number: the median sale price. They skip everything that actually matters to your decision. Five things the Iron County MLS tells me about your market, pulled fresh from the data ending May 14, 2026.

Truth 01
34%
of Cedar City listings did not close.
Source: Iron County MLS

Listing with the wrong agent has a real failure cost.

Over the trailing twelve months, 908 Cedar City residential listings closed. In the same window, 184 listings expired and 291 were withdrawn or cancelled. That is 475 listings that ended without a sale.

Counted against everything that resolved, more than one in three listings did not close. The expired listings sat for an average of 202 days before giving up.

This is the case for picking the right listing agent, the right price, and the right marketing on day one. Not after thirty days of crickets.

Truth 02

Cedar City sellers are listing $94k above what is closing.

Active listings (today)
$532,923
Actual sold avg (TTM)
$438,869
Gap
+$94,054 (+21%)

The agent who hands you the highest list price at the kitchen table is usually not your friend. They are buying your signature. Then thirty days in, the price-reduction conversation starts. The gap above is the math behind that pattern.

Truth 03
$6,359 avg gap

Sellers are leaving real dollars, not percentages, on the table.

Cedar City sellers averaged $6,359 below their original list price over the trailing twelve months. That works out to 98.6 percent of list across all residential, or 99 percent for single-family alone. Source: Iron County MLS, 908 closed residential transactions.

A six-thousand-dollar gap is not a market problem. That is the normal noise of buyers negotiating. A forty-thousand-dollar gap is a pricing problem the listing agent should have caught at the kitchen table.

Truth 04

Cedar City has two different residential markets, not one.

Single-family and townhomes trade on different curves. Single-family is up 15 percent in volume. Townhome sales are essentially flat, but median price ticked up 4 percent to $314,000. That divergence almost always means new construction is setting comps higher while older stock softens.

If you own a townhome near SUU, in Cross Hollows, or in the older Cedar Heights pocket, you need a different listing strategy than your neighbor with a single-family ranch. Price band, buyer pool, media, and timing all shift.

Single-family median
$460,000
657 sold, 99% of list, 77 day median DOM
Townhome median
$314,000
217 sold, 99% of list, 53 day median DOM
Truth 05

Who is actually buying Cedar City homes, in cash and in financing.

Over the last twelve months in Iron County, 27 percent of all residential sales closed in cash. Another 52 percent used conventional financing. FHA accounted for 11 percent, VA for 6 percent, and Utah Housing or owner-financing made up the rest.

That financing mix matters when you price and prep your home. A heavily cash market means appraisal contingencies are less of a constraint. A 17 percent FHA-plus-VA share means a clean inspection and an FHA-eligible roof matter for entry-level homes.

Iron County residential financing mix, last 12 months
Conventional 52% · 1,059 sales
Cash 27% · 550 sales
FHA 11% · 230 sales
VA 6% · 125 sales
Other (Utah Housing, owner-fin, assumptions) 4% · 82 sales

As a dual-licensed REALTOR and Guild Mortgage lender (NMLS 1794818), I think about your home in both modes. That is rare in this market. Source: Iron County MLS residential closings, 5/1/2025 to 5/14/2026.

Selling in Cedar City

The hometown
listing playbook.

Selling in Cedar City is different from selling almost anywhere else in Southern Utah. Lower price points than St. George. A college calendar that drives buyer activity. Snow on the ground from December through March. Pretending none of that matters is how listings sit. Here is how I think about it, broken into pieces.

Topic 01

Who actually buys homes in Cedar City

It is not one group. It is at least four, and they each respond to different marketing.

Cedar City has its own buyer mix that does not match the rest of Iron County or anywhere south of here. Most agents write the same listing copy they would write for a St. George home. That is how showings get missed.

SUU faculty, staff & admin hires

A steady churn of new hires every summer. They are often relocating from out of state and shopping remotely. Drone footage and a clean walkthrough video matter here. So does proximity to campus.

St. George summer escapees

Retirees who already live in Washington County but want a cooler second home for June through August. Cedar Mountain, Brian Head, and a fifteen-degree temperature drop are the pitch.

In-town move-up buyers

Locals who already own here and are trading up to Old Sorrel, the Bench, or a newer build closer to the canyon. They know every neighborhood cold. Floor plan and finishes win, not the lifestyle pitch.

Parent & investor SUU buyers

Parents buying a home for a student to live in, often with roommates. Investors targeting four-bedroom rentals near campus. They want bedroom count, parking, and walk distance to SUU.

Topic 02

The neighborhood map

Cedar City is small enough that the block you are on can move the price more than the bedroom count.

A quick read on the pockets I list in most. Your home does not need to be in one of these to work. This is just where the activity tends to cluster.

Old Sorrel Ranch & the Phase 5 builds

Newer construction on the east side. Big lots, walkout basements on the right grades, and views toward Cedar Mountain. Strong appeal to move-up families and out-of-state relocators looking for new.

The SUU corridor & downtown grid

Walkable to campus and to Main Street. Smaller older homes, some craftsman bungalows, plus a layer of student-adjacent rentals. Investor and parent-buyer pool is concentrated here.

The Bench & Fiddlers Canyon

Up the hill on the east side. Views are the leverage point here. Photography that does not capture the view is leaving real money on the table. Drone and twilight matter more in this pocket than anywhere else in town.

Cross Hollows & the south side

Established subdivisions near the interstate exit. Strong appeal to commuters and to families looking for more square foot per dollar. Easy access to the freeway is a real selling point I write into the description.

The Enoch border & north end

Bigger parcels, more rural in feel, often with horse property. Different buyer than the in-town pool. Water shares, fencing, and outbuildings need to be in the listing description from day one.

Topic 03

When the Cedar City market actually moves

Cedar City does not follow the same seasonal curve as St. George. The SUU calendar drives it.

Honestly, I had to recheck this against the MLS data before I wrote it. The common wisdom says spring or summer is the peak. The actual Cedar City numbers from last year tell a longer story. May through October are all strong, and September is the single peak month for closings.

Winter (Nov to Feb)

The slowest stretch of the year. Snow on the ground for most of it. Closings run roughly forty to sixty homes per month in Cedar City. But the buyers who tour in January and February are serious, and offers tend to be cleaner. Fewer competing listings can work in your favor on a well-prepped home.

Spring (Mar to May)

The market wakes up. Inventory builds quickly and so does activity. May was the strongest spring month last year. Families timing the school calendar, plus the early wave of SUU faculty and staff hires shopping ahead of August moves. Listing in late March or early April catches the build-up rather than fighting it.

Summer (Jun to Aug)

Steady and busy. SUU move-ins, faculty and staff transitions, Shakespeare Festival traffic, and St. George heat refugees pushing up the freeway. Closings run in the seventies most months. Plenty of buyer activity, plenty of competing listings.

Fall (Sep to Oct)

The actual peak. September was the highest closing month in Cedar City last year, and October was right behind it. The colors on Cedar Mountain bring weekend traffic up Highway 14. Buyers who got priced out in summer come back with a sharper pencil. If your home is ready, listing in late August lands you right inside the strongest window.

Topic 04

Pricing it right the first time

In a smaller market like Cedar City, a stale listing gets noticed fast. Other agents pull it up at the kitchen table as a cautionary tale.

Honestly, the agent who hands you the highest list price at the kitchen table is usually not your friend. They are buying your signature. Then thirty days in, the price-reduction conversation starts.

Cedar City sellers averaged ninety-nine percent of list price over the last twelve months. Read that again. The market is paying close to ask when homes are priced correctly. The catch is the showing pool here is smaller than St. George, so you do not have unlimited weekends of buyer traffic to absorb a high opening number. A correctly priced listing typically gets its strongest activity in the first two weekends. Miss that window and you are now competing with newer listings that look fresher in the buyer feeds.

What I bring to your kitchen table
  • Closed comps from the last 90 days in your specific Cedar City pocket, same product type.
  • Active and pending listings I am competing against right now in town.
  • Expired and withdrawn listings, so we can see exactly what did not work locally.
  • A pricing band, not a single number. You pick where in that band you want to sit.
Topic 05

Prep, repairs, and what to skip

A Cedar City punch list looks different from a St. George one. Snow load on the roof, swamp coolers, basement moisture. None of that comes up south of here.

Usually worth it
  • Fresh paint in main living areas
  • Updated light fixtures and bulb temperature
  • Front yard cleanup, especially after winter
  • Basement moisture spot fixes
  • Cabinet hardware swap, deep clean, declutter
Usually skip
  • Full kitchen or bath remodels
  • Flooring you would not pick yourself
  • New roof if current one passes inspection
  • Swapping a working swamp cooler for AC
  • Anything you cannot finish before listing

When I walk a Cedar City property, I will tell you straight: do this, skip that. A 1990s ranch in Cross Hollows has different leverage points than an Old Sorrel new build. Every home is its own punch list.

Topic 06

The listing timeline, step by step

From the day we sign the listing agreement to the day you hand over the keys. No mystery.

Week 0: Kitchen table
Walk the property. Comps. Pricing band. Signed agreement.
Photography and video scheduled. Punch list reviewed.
Week 1: Media
Cinematic shoot. Drone. Twilight. Floor plan. Reels.
You see and approve everything before it goes live.
Day before launch: Coming Soon
MLS Coming Soon status. Social teaser. Buyer database alerted.
All within NAR Clear Cooperation policy.
Day 1 active: Launch
MLS live. Full portal syndication. Reverse prospecting begins.
Cedar City agent network blast. Social cuts hit Instagram, TikTok, Facebook.
Day 7 onward: Campaign
Targeted digital acquisition. Weekly reporting. Honest feedback.
Showing data, online engagement, agent feedback, every Sunday.
The Cedar City portfolio

Recently sold around town.

Sold homes from across Cedar City and the Enoch border. Use these as a feel for the kind of homes I list, not as a precise comp set for your specific address. For that, we should talk.

See the full Cedar City sold portfolio
What you will see
  • Old Sorrel Ranch new construction and resale
  • SUU corridor homes and downtown bungalows
  • Bench and Fiddlers Canyon view properties
  • Cross Hollows and south side family homes
  • Enoch border parcels with land and outbuildings
Free Cedar City home valuation

What is your Cedar City home worth, honestly?

Three steps. First an automated comp pull. Then I personally review it against active and recently sold homes in your specific Cedar City pocket. You get a real pricing band, not a feel-good number.

  • 1 Automated comps from the MLS within minutes
  • 2 Personal review by me within one business day
  • 3 Optional walkthrough at your home or over video
No pressure

No obligation, no marketing list signup, no calls from a call center. You either decide to list with me or you do not.

Start here

Tell me about your home

By submitting, you agree to be contacted by Scott Buehler regarding your home. No spam. No third-party lists.

Why list with me in Cedar City

Four reasons it matters who you pick locally.

Most listing presentations in Cedar City look identical. Here is the short version of what is different about working with me. Full marketing playbook lives on the Our Marketing page.

01

Cinematic media on every listing

Professional photography, drone over Cedar Mountain in the right light, twilight shots, narrated walkthrough video, Reels and TikTok cuts. Not an upsell. Not reserved for higher price points. Standard.

See the media pillar
02

The Secret Sauce digital campaign

A proprietary, closed-loop digital marketing sequence that builds intrigue and targets high-intent buyers, including out-of-state SUU recruits and St. George summer escapees. Most agents do not run anything like it.

See the Secret Sauce
03

Cedar City agent network

Cedar City is small enough that other agents matter a lot. I have spent twenty years inside that network. The moment your home goes Active, I pull MLS reverse prospecting and personally contact every buyer agent in town with a matching saved search.

See agent network pillar
Only one in the region
04

Dual-licensed coordinator model

I am your listing agent on this sale, and your mortgage lender on the next purchase. Never both on the same transaction. One person quarterbacking the whole move. Your buy-side agent is a trusted partner I refer in.

See the full playbook
What Cedar City sellers say

Reviews from the home base.

A few words from sellers I have worked with right here in Cedar City and the Enoch border.

“Scott walked our property, told us exactly which two repairs were worth doing, and we listed two weeks later. The drone footage of the SUU foothills behind our house got more comments than I knew was normal. Under contract in nine days.”
M. and J. Hendricks
SUU corridor seller
“We had interviewed two other agents in town. Scott showed up with comps already pulled, an honest pricing band, and a marketing plan that actually made sense for our neighborhood. He sold our home and financed the new build. One person. Easy to find.”
R. Olsen
Old Sorrel area seller and buyer
“Our place sat on five acres near the Enoch line. The first agent we talked to wanted to list it like an in-town home. Scott understood the water shares and outbuildings mattered to the right buyer. He wrote the description for that buyer and we sold to one.”
L. and T. Whitford
Enoch border seller
All reviews

Read the full review portfolio.

Verified reviews on Google, Zillow, and Realtor.com from sellers across Southern Utah.

See all reviews
Selling somewhere else?

I list across Southern Utah.

If your home is in St. George, Washington, Hurricane, or Ivins, there is a city page with the local playbook for each.

Cedar City seller FAQ

The questions sellers actually ask.

Straight answers, with the Iron County MLS data behind them where it exists. Nothing here is a generic Utah answer copy-pasted from a national blog. This is Cedar City specific.

How long does it take to sell a home in Cedar City?

Median agent days on market in Cedar City over the trailing twelve months was 77 days, per the Iron County Board of Realtors MLS. That number is up from 65 days a year earlier. It is the time from list date to under contract, not list to closing.

Days to close runs another 35 to 40 days on top of that for most financed buyers. So end to end, a typical Cedar City listing is closing somewhere around 115 days from the day it hits the MLS, give or take. Cash buyers compress that timeline significantly.

Your specific timeline depends on price band, neighborhood, and how the home is prepared. Old Sorrel new construction moves on a different curve than a 1990s ranch in Cross Hollows. The SUU calendar drives a lot of the buyer activity, which is why May through October are the strongest closing months. Winter is quieter, but offers tend to be cleaner.

What is the median home price in Cedar City right now?

The median sale price for a Cedar City single-family home over the trailing twelve months ending May 2026 was $460,000, up from $449,900 the prior year. The average sale price was $486,756, essentially flat year over year. Source: Iron County Board of Realtors MLS via FlexMLS.

Townhouses landed at a $314,000 median ($297,341 average), and the small Cedar City condo market sat at a $243,000 median.

A city-wide median does not tell you what your specific home is worth. A 1990s ranch in Cross Hollows trades on a different curve than an Old Sorrel new build or a bungalow walking distance to SUU. For your specific pricing band, request a free valuation below.

What percent of list price do Cedar City sellers typically get?

Cedar City single-family sellers averaged 99 percent of list price over the trailing twelve months ending May 2026. That is essentially flat year over year. Across all residential including townhouses and condos, the percentage was 98.6 percent.

In real dollars, the average Cedar City seller closed $6,359 below their original list price. Source: Iron County MLS, 908 closed residential transactions. A $6,000 negotiation gap is normal market noise. A $40,000 gap is a pricing problem the listing agent should have caught at the kitchen table.

The market is still paying close to ask when homes are priced correctly. The catch is the showing pool here is smaller than St. George, so you do not have unlimited weekends of buyer traffic to absorb a high opening number. A correctly priced listing typically draws its strongest activity in the first two weekends.

Miss that window with a number that is too high and the listing goes stale fast in a small market. Other agents pull a stale Cedar City listing up at the kitchen table as a cautionary tale. That is why pricing inside the band on day one matters here more than it does in a bigger market.

Is now a good time to sell in Cedar City?

The trailing twelve months tell a clear story. Closed single-family sales in Cedar City were up 15 percent to 657. Sold dollar volume was up 15 percent to $319.8 million. Median sale price ticked up 2 percent to $460,000. Sellers still averaged 99 percent of list.

The one shift worth flagging is days on market. Inventory is up 20 percent year over year, which gave buyers more to compare. Median agent days on market stretched from 65 days to 77 days. That is what a more balanced market looks like, not a softening one. Real money is still moving through this market.

One number that has not changed and matters more than people realize: roughly one in three Cedar City listings expired or withdrew without closing over the same window (475 of 1,383 listings that ended in the TTM). The market is healthy for prepared sellers. It is unforgiving for overpriced ones.

Honestly, the answer depends on your home and your goals more than the macro market. If your home shows well and prices inside the band, you do not need to wait for some abstract perfect quarter.

When is the best time of year to list in Cedar City?

Cedar City does not follow the typical spring peak that most agents pitch. The MLS data tells a longer story. Looking at last year's monthly closings, September was the single strongest closing month in Cedar City at 83 closings, with October right behind at 82. May through October are all strong, with closings running in the seventies most of those months.

The SUU calendar drives most of it. Faculty and staff hires shop ahead of August move-ins. St. George summer escapees tour from June through August looking for a cooler second home. Shakespeare Festival traffic helps in midsummer. Fall buyers come back with a sharper pencil after getting priced out in summer, plus the Cedar Mountain colors bring weekend traffic up Highway 14.

If your home is ready, listing in late August lands you right inside the strongest window. Listing in late March or early April catches the spring build-up rather than fighting it.

What neighborhoods in Cedar City do you sell in?

All of them. The SUU corridor, Old Sorrel Ranch (including the new Phase 5 builds at Old Sorrel Heights), Cross Hollows, Fiddlers Canyon, the historic downtown grid, the Bench above Main, the Enoch border subdivisions, and the more rural pockets out past Highway 130.

Each pocket has its own buyer pool and its own pricing logic:

  • Old Sorrel Ranch & the Phase 5 builds: Move-up families and out-of-state relocators. Views toward Cedar Mountain are the lever.
  • SUU corridor & downtown: Parent and investor buyer pool. Walk distance to campus matters.
  • The Bench & Fiddlers Canyon: Views are the leverage. Drone and twilight photography are non-negotiable here.
  • Cross Hollows & south side: Square foot per dollar and freeway access. Family homes and commuter buyers.
  • Enoch border & north end: Horse property, bigger parcels, outbuildings. Different buyer than in-town.

What about the Cedar City townhouse market?

Cedar City townhomes are their own market with their own data. Over the trailing twelve months ending May 2026, 217 townhomes closed at a median sale price of $314,000, up 5 percent year over year. Sellers still averaged 99 percent of list price. Source: Iron County MLS.

The interesting wrinkle is that median price ticked up while average sale price ticked down 1 percent. That divergence almost always means new construction townhomes are setting higher comps while older stock is softening a touch. Active inventory grew 21 percent year over year, with median days on market at 53 days from list to under contract.

Buyer pool for townhomes leans heavily on right-sizers, SUU faculty and staff, parents buying near campus, and investors. Each of those groups responds to different listing copy and different staging. Lumping a townhome listing in with the same playbook used for a 1990s single-family ranch is how showings get missed.

Who is actually buying homes in Cedar City right now?

The Iron County MLS recorded financing types on every residential sale over the last twelve months. The mix is more useful than the demographics most agents quote, because it tells you what kind of offer to expect on your home.

  • Conventional financing: 52 percent (1,059 sales). The default buyer.
  • Cash: 27 percent (550 sales). A meaningful share. Cash buyers tend to be downsizers from St. George, out-of-state retirees, and parents buying for SUU students.
  • FHA: 11 percent (230 sales). Mostly first-time buyers and SUU staff at entry-level price points.
  • VA: 6 percent (125 sales). Active duty and veteran buyers.
  • Utah Housing, owner-financing, assumptions: 4 percent (82 sales combined).

What this means for pricing and prep: appraisal contingencies are less constraining than in heavier-financed markets, but you still want a clean inspection because 17 percent of buyers (FHA plus VA) need it. As a dual-licensed REALTOR and Guild Mortgage lender, I can read an offer for both sides of the table when one comes in.

How is Cedar City different from the St. George market?

Cedar City sits at roughly 5,800 feet of elevation with four real seasons and snow on the ground for parts of the winter. St. George is desert at 2,800 feet with hundred-degree summers. That elevation gap is why retirees living in Washington County actively shop Cedar City for a cooler June through August second home.

Price points: Cedar City single-family median is $460,000 over the trailing twelve months. St. George single-family is significantly higher. Cedar City is the move-up budget for many Iron and Washington County buyers, and the entry budget for SUU faculty hires.

Buyer pool: Cedar City has SUU faculty hires, parents buying for students, in-town move-ups, and St. George summer escapees. St. George has retirees, second-home buyers, and a much heavier short-term-rental investor layer that is not really a factor up here.

Days on market run longer in Cedar City because the showing pool is smaller. Pricing precision matters more here for that reason.

Can you sell my Cedar City home and finance my next one?

Yes, and this is genuinely rare in Cedar City. I am dual-licensed: listing agent on the home you are selling through Real Broker LLC, and mortgage lender on the home you are buying through Guild Mortgage (NMLS 1794818). Licensed in Utah, Nevada, Arizona, California, and Wyoming on the mortgage side.

One important guardrail: I am never both the agent and the lender on the same transaction. That is not allowed. On your sale, I am your listing agent. On your purchase, the buy-side agent is a trusted local partner I refer in, and I handle the mortgage. One person quarterbacks the whole move so the sale closing and the purchase closing actually line up.

If you only need the listing side, that works too. The mortgage license stays in the background unless you want to use it.

Still have questions?

Text or call me directly.

I answer my own phone. No call center, no assistant gatekeeping. If I am with another client I will text you back the same day.

Ready when you are

Let’s talk about
your Cedar City home.

Start with a free home valuation. No pressure, no signup wall, no marketing list. Just an honest pricing band for your specific home, in your specific Cedar City pocket.