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Utah Public Records

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Utah Most Updated Online Public and Criminal Records Portal

Statewide public records directory

Utah Official Records, Agencies & Answers

Jump into the four biggest statewide record categories, review the refreshed Utah overview pulled from the live database, and open only direct government sources from the directory below.

Top topic Criminal Records Criminal history tools, sheriff links, and related justice records.
Top topic Court Records Civil, criminal, and court access resources.
Top topic Expungements Record-clearance and expungement guidance.
Top topic Inmate Search Custody, jail, and inmate lookup resources.
UT

Utah public records, redesigned

Utah Most Updated Online Public and Criminal Records Portal

Updated March 31, 2026

Look into Utah criminal records, personal history such as divorces and property ownerships. Access vital records offices and request death certificates, marriages as well as divorces or dissolution decrees. Find legal documents and files from family court, civil court, superior court, trial court, and supreme court, as well as federal courts. Asset search that can reveal real estate deeds, judgment liens and bankruptcy filing…

Official sources 29 Direct state links currently rendered on this page
Counties County coverage 29 County-level public records coverage tied to Utah
FAQ / Q&A 9 Live statewide answers surfaced from the database
Bonus cities 0 Standalone city record pages currently shown

About Utah

Open the dedicated background page for a deeper history, civic overview, and statewide public-records context beyond the agency directory.

Open about page

Explore cities & counties County links 🗺️ Local map

Move deeper into the state structure with the city directory, county access page, and location-specific record hubs without losing the statewide view.

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✨ County picks County directory: open county access

Explore every linked Utah specialty page

The hub now links directly to every live state-topic page we found for Utah. Use the cards below to jump straight into each specialty area.

13 sub pages linked

About Utah public records

This panel now uses the newer statewide heading content from the database instead of the old generic filler copy.

DB-backed content live

Look into Utah criminal records, personal history such as divorces and property ownerships. Access vital records offices and request death certificates, marriages as well as divorces or dissolution decrees. Find legal documents and files from family court, civil court, superior court, trial court, and supreme court, as well as federal courts. Asset search that can reveal real estate deeds, judgment liens and bankruptcy filing…

Utah was the 45th territory in the U.S. to gain statehood on January 4th 1896. There are 29 counties and 243 incorporated municipalities carrying out Utah's local government duties. County and city governments elect officials, create department and divisions making up their agencies servicing citizens. Essential county duties include law enforcement, record keeping, tax collections, justice courts, economic development and elections. Open record laws in Utah give its residents better access to information held by government agencies, departments and divisions. All local and statewide agencies fall under the Open…

State snapshot Did you know? In Utah, arrest searches usually move from city police to county jail and district court records, so local and county pages often get you to the booking trail faster than statewide lookups. Quick route: county jail and district court pages usually do more work than statewide tools once booking begins.

About Utah public records

Clearer question cards, modern spacing, and the same live statewide answers from the database.

Q What is included in a Utah background check?
In Utah, background checks are governed by the Government Records Access and Management Act (GRAMA) (Utah Code § 63G-2-101 through § 63G-2-901). They may include criminal history, sex offender status, court filings, arrest records, and vital statistics. Agencies must respond within 10 business days to respond. The law is administered by Utah State Records Committee (USRC), 346 S. Rio Grande St., Salt Lake City, UT 84101; (801) 531-3860.
Q Where can I find police reports in Utah?
Police reports in Utah are public records under the Government Records Access and Management Act (GRAMA). Submit your request to the agency that generated the report. Who may request: Any person - no residency requirement. Response deadline: 10 business days to respond. If access is denied, you may appeal to district or circuit court. Under the Utah Government Records Access and Management Act (Utah Code § 63G-2-101), most incident and accident reports become public after the investigation is closed. Requests can be submitted to the records division of the reporting agency. The Utah Bureau of Criminal Identification (BCI) handles reports generated by state troopers; local police departments and county sheriff offices handle their own reports. Allow 5-10 business days for standard requests; fees typically range from $5-$25 per report.
Q What are the procedures to obtain Utah vital records, and what is included in those records with address, not URLs?
Vital records (birth, death, marriage, divorce) in Utah are maintained by the state Department of Health or Vital Statistics. Standard fees: Actual cost of duplication; staff time may be charged for complex requests; elec. Certified copies carry separate fee schedules. Fee waivers may be available for journalists, nonprofits, and public-interest requesters - always ask.
Q What is the school district and performance data for Utah?
The Utah State Office of Education provides school district performance data for all public schools in the state. The data includes information on student achievement, graduation rates, teacher quality, and school finance. The data can be accessed through the Utah State Office of Education's website. Utah State Board of Education (www.schools.utah.gov) publishes annual school and district performance reports covering graduation rates, standardized test scores, chronic absenteeism, and college/career readiness. Reports are available on the agency's official website and are updated each fall following the close of the academic year. Parents and researchers can compare district performance across Utah using the state's school accountability portal.
Q What is the crime statistics for Utah?
Utah crime statistics are compiled by the Utah Department of Public Safety (UDPS), Bureau of Criminal Identification (BCI), and published in the annual Crime in Utah report at bci.utah.gov. FBI UCR data covers Utah. In 2022, Utah reported a violent crime rate of approximately 220 per 100,000 residents - below the national average. The BCI Crime Statistics portal provides county and city data. Salt Lake City and Provo police departments publish city-specific crime statistics.
Q If I get arrested in Utah where would I go to jail and court? include address.
If arrested in Utah, you would be taken to the local county jail. Court appearances are scheduled in the county where the arrest occurred. Under the Government Records Access and Management Act (GRAMA), arrest records and booking information are generally public. Oversight: Utah State Records Committee (USRC), 346 S. Rio Grande St., Salt Lake City, UT 84101; (801) 531-3860. Appeals go to district or circuit court.
Q Can I find Public records in Utah State Library?
Yes. Utah state and public libraries provide access to public records databases. The Government Records Access and Management Act (GRAMA) (Utah Code § 63G-2-101 through § 63G-2-901) guarantees public access to government documents. Many libraries offer free access to LexisNexis, court records portals, and vital record indexes. The Utah State Library Division, 250 N provides free public access to government records, genealogy databases (Ancestry.com, HeritageQuest), legal research tools (LexisNexis, Westlaw), and historical newspaper archives. Under the Utah Government Records Access and Management Act (Utah Code § 63G-2-101), library patrons can request government documents through the library's inter-agency loan and records request services at no charge. Many local public libraries throughout Utah also offer digital access to court records and vital statistics indexes.
Q Where is the Utah State Library located?
The Utah State Library is located at 250 North 1950 West, Suite A, Salt Lake City, UT 84116. The library maintains public access to government records, historical archives, genealogy databases, and legal research tools. Under the Utah Government Records Access and Management Act (Utah Code § 63G-2-101), Utah residents may request government documents through the state library's reference services. Collections include census records, land patents, vital statistics indexes, and digitized newspapers. Most state library services are free to Utah residents. Contact the library by phone or visit the official UT state library website for research guides and online catalog access.
Q Utah State fingerprinting office
The Utah Bureau of Criminal Identification (BCI) is the agency responsible for fingerprinting services in the state. BCI has offices located in Salt Lake City, Ogden, Provo, St. George, and Cedar City. Residents can also be fingerprinted at local sheriff offices, police departments, and approved private LiveScan vendors throughout Utah. Prints are submitted electronically to the Utah Bureau of Criminal Identification (BCI) and to the FBI for national background checks. Common purposes include employment, professional licensing, adoption, volunteer work, and immigration. Standard fee: $5-$25 for ink cards; $20-$50 for electronic LiveScan. Allow 3-7 business days for results to be returned to the requesting agency.
Last reviewed: Mar 25, 2026 Updated: Mar 25, 2026