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Horse Properties

Horse properties and larger-lot homes in Southern Utah.

Buying a horse property is not just about acreage. Joel Robertson helps buyers evaluate zoning, utilities, access, animal-use rules, fencing, outbuildings, water considerations, and long-term resale factors across St. George and Southern Utah.

Location and land use

Compare rural corridors, zoning, animal allowances, setbacks, easements, and neighborhood restrictions before assuming a property works for horses.

Property improvements

Review barns, corrals, fencing, irrigation, pasture layout, trailer access, storage, drainage, and existing equestrian improvements.

Due diligence

Verify water, septic, utilities, access roads, floodplain or wash issues, HOA rules, title matters, and resale considerations before writing an offer.

Areas buyers often compare

Horse-property buyers often look beyond central St. George and compare larger-lot or rural options throughout Washington County and the surrounding Southern Utah market.

Horse-property checklist

Animal-use zoning and local ordinances
Water, irrigation, and utility availability
Barns, corrals, fencing, and pasture layout
Trailer access, driveway width, and road conditions
Septic, wells, drainage, floodplain, and wash concerns
HOA rules, CC&Rs, easements, and title restrictions
Outbuilding condition and permitted improvements
Resale potential and buyer pool for the property type

Next step

Get a local plan before you make a move.

Send the request through the owned lead engine first. The site keeps the page, device, attribution, and intent context before anything is handed off downstream.

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