Utah Facts
Utah Facts

55 Interesting Utah Facts

Karin Lehnardt
By Karin Lehnardt, Senior Writer
Published August 20, 2016Updated March 12, 2020

What do you think of when you hear the word "Utah"? Do you conjure images of Mormons? The red rocks of beautiful Moab? Or the best skiing on earth? Find out what Utah is famous for and more.


  • The snow density in Utah's famous Cottonwood Canyons is 8.5%, which is the perfect "body" for a perfect ski powder day.[18]
  • According to historical data, January 13 is the golden winter day, perfect for skiing in Utah. This day has the highest likelihood of receiving snowfall.[18]
  • In Utah, it is illegal to hire trombone players to play on the street to advertise an auction. Additionally, it is illegal to fish while on horseback and to hunt whales. In Salt Lake City it is illegal to walk down the street carrying a paper bag containing a violin.[23]
  • Utah has the highest literacy rate in the United States.[9]
  • Utah Lake is 24 miles long and 12 miles across. Almost 41% of the lake evaporates each year. There used to be a showboat on the lake that included on-deck dancing and a full orchestra.[21]
  • Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, and Utah all meet at four corners. This is the only place in the United States where four states come together.[9]
  • Salt Lake
    The Great Salt Lake is saltier than the ocean
  • Utah’s Great Salt Lake is about four times saltier than any of the world’s oceans. If a person boiled 1 quart of water from the saltiest part of the lake, a half cup of salt would remain. It is so salty because as the ancient Lake Bonneville dried up, salt and other minerals were left behind. Because the shrinking lake had no stream out to sea, the salt deposits became concentrated in the lake.[3]
  • According to Webster’s, “Utahans” is the grammatically correct way to refer to residents of Utah; however, most people from Utah stubbornly refer to themselves as “Utahns.”[5]
  • The name “Utah” is derived from the name of the Ute Native American tribe. The name means “people of the mountains.”[9]
  • Utah is the second-driest state in the United States after Nevada. On average, Utah has about 300 sunny days a year.[9]
  • Because it is centrally located in the Intermountain West, Utah is often called the “Crossroads of the West.” Its geography has three major land areas: the Rocky Mountains, the Basin and Ridge Region, and the Colorado Plateau.[9]
  • In 1824, Jim Bridger was the first Caucasian person to see the Great Salt Lake. He initially thought he had found the Pacific Ocean because it was so salty, but soon realized it was a giant salt lake. In the 1830s, thousands of people travelling from the East made stops in the Great Salt Lake region, which was then known as Lake Youta.[15]
  • Fillmore, Utah, is named after President Millard Fillmore and was initially designated as the capital. Salt Lake City replaced it as the territorial capital in 1856. Additionally, Salt Lake City was referred to as Great Salt Lake City until 1868.[23]
  • In 2012, Utah had the fourth highest bankruptcy filing in the United States, with 5.99 petitions for every 1,000 people. The average nationwide per capita filing rate was 3.97 petitions for every 1,000 people.[14]
  • During the Utah War (1857–1858), over 120 unarmed settlers, including women and children, were murdered by a group of Mormon militiamen. The militia initially claimed Native Americans killed the settlers. The motives behind the massacre remain unclear, though historians point to war hysteria and a fear of outsiders. Scholars still debate whether the Mormon leader, Brigham Young, ordered the massacre or if the responsibility lies with local leaders in southern Utah.[15]
  • Utah is called the “Beehive State” because most of Utah’s early white settlers belonged to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, who follow the Book of Mormon. They were hard workers and envisioned themselves as a “hive of industry.” They wanted to call their new state “Deseret,” which is the word for “honey bee” in the Book of Mormon.[3]
  • Plastic Surgery Facts
    Utah has the highest percentage of plastic surgeons per capita than any other state
  • Salt Lake City, UT, has more plastic surgeons per capita than any other city in the United States.[17]
  • The state of Utah could fit inside California two times with a little left over. Only half of Utah could fit in Virginia.[9]
  • Utah is home to the largest open-pit mine in the world, Brigham Canyon.[3]
  • Utah has an average of only 32 people per square mile and is one of the most thinly populated states in the nation. Most Utahans live in the towns and cities along the Wasatch Front, which is the western side of the Wasatch Mountains (which is a range of the Rocky Mountains). Utah is the 13th largest, the 33rd most populous, and the 10th least densely populated state in the U.S.[3]
  • Approximately 82% of Utahans are of European descent. Hispanics or Latinos are the next largest ethic group in the state, making up almost 12% of the population. Utah has smaller populations of Asians, African Americans, and Native Americans.[9]
  • Utah is the only state to have a cooking pot among its state symbols. The Dutch oven was approved as a state symbol by the legislature in 1997.[3]
  • Hill Air Force Base near Ogden, Utah, is the largest employer in the state of Utah.[3]
  • Famous Utahans include David Archuleta, Butch Cassidy, Shannon Hale, Karl Malone, Donny and Marie Osmond, Robert Redford, Julianne and Derek Houghs, Roseanne Barr, Loretta Young, James Woods, Chrissy Teigen, Orson Scott Card, Terry Tempest Williams, and Steve Young.[9]
  • In Utah there is a town called “Levan.” Levan is “navel” backwards—and Levan is in the center, or is the “navel,” of Utah.[3]
  • Utah Wedding Fact
    More Utahans are married than the citizens in any other U.S. state
  • A higher percentage of Utahans are married than in any other state in the United States. According to the 2012 American Community Survey, 57% of Utah’s women (15 years and older) are married, down from 69% in 1950.[6]
  • Utah couples marry at a younger age than in any other state in the country. The median age for a first marriage in Utah is 26.2 for the groom and 24.1 for the bride. The average for the rest of the United States is 29.1 for the groom and 27.1 for the bride.[6]
  • Utah’s divorce rate is slightly higher than the U.S. average and has been that way for decades. However, while Utahans are more likely than their national counterparts to divorce, they are also more likely to marry or remarry.[6]
  • About 13% of Utah’s children live in households headed by a woman with no husband present, which is lower than the national average of 25%.[6]
  • With 31% of the population under the age of 18, Utah has the youngest population in the United States. It also has the highest birth rate in the nation.[9]
  • Utah is home to the United States' first department store, Zions Co-operative Mercantile Institution. Today it is known as ZCMI.[3]
  • Kanab, Utah, is also known as “Little Hollywood” because over 100 movies (mostly Westerns) and many T.V. series have been filmed there since 1924. Famous movies include Stage Coach, The Lone Ranger, Gunsmoke, Planet of the Apes, The Outlaw Josey Wales, and Sergeants 3.[11]
  • Lagoon—located in Farmington, Utah—is the oldest operating amusement park in the American West, and its original roller coaster, named “Old Woodie,” is the 3rd oldest in the nation.[3]
  • Utah has the highest rate of online porn subscriptions in the United States.[8]
  • Approximately 62% of Utahans are Mormons, or members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Utah is the most homogeneous state in the United States in terms of religion.[9]
  • Utah Snow Facts
    Utah claims to have the "Greatest Snow on Earth"
  • Because of the state of Utah’s high elevation and desert-like climate, its snow is dry and powdery. Hence, Utah claims to have the “Greatest Snow on Earth.”[9]
  • Utah has one of the highest rates of prescription drug abuse in the United States. Over the past decade, it has increase by 800%.[10]
  • Utah restaurants and bars have a unique partition that separates restaurant bartenders who are preparing drinks from the customers who order them. Their aim is to prevent excessive drinking by keeping alcohol out of sight. These partitions are called “Zion Curtains” by locals.[9]
  • Utah is home to the Missionary Training Center in Provo, Utah. This 35-acre center for LDS (Mormon) missionaries can house 3,800 missionaries and it serves 10,000 meals a day. It is the nation’s second largest on-site language school, after the U.S. Defense Department’s Language Institute in Monterrey, California.[20]
  • Polygamy was practiced in Utah until it was banned in 1890 as a condition of being granted statehood. Today there are roughly 40,000 polygamous marriages in the state of Utah, mostly among breakaway Mormon fundamentalist groups.[13]
  • On May 10, 1869, the First Transcontinental Railroad was completed at Promontory Summit, Utah. The event was billed as the “Wedding of the Rails.”[3]
  • While presidential hopeful Mitt Romney was born in Detroit, Michigan, he calls Utah home. His new 5,900-square-foot home in Holliday will include high ceilings, a hot tub, a secret door/room, an exercise room, and more.[1]
  • In 2014, 1,039 people dressed as angels, wise men, and other religious figures broke the Guinness World Record for the largest live nativity scene. Also in attendance in the Provo, Utah, park event were a camel, a donkey, and some sheep.[7]
  • The FBI holds various Utah “secrets” in its vault, including UFO sightings in Utah, snooping into whether the Utah NAACP had been infiltrated by communists, a death threat in Utah against Lady Bird Johnson, information on serial killer Ted Bundy, and former FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover’s dislike of Cleon Skousen (who has become an important figure in today’s Tea Party movement).[2]
  • Walter Frederick Morrison, the man credited with inventing the Frisbee, was born in Richfield, Utah. He said he got the idea for the “Pluto Platter” after throwing cake tins on the beach.[4]
  • Rubber Chicken
    Another reason to love Utah
  • Salt Lake City, UT, is home to the nation’s leading manufacturer of rubber chickens.[3]
  • One of the most unique places in Utah is the Bonneville Salt Flats, named after the ancient sea that covered the area. Stretching over 30,000 acres, the white salt is millions of years old. Thousands of tourists, filmmakers, and land speed racers make it famous throughout the world.[9]
  • Two dates appear on Utah’s state seal: 1847, the date Mormon settlers arrived in Utah, and 1896, the year Utah became the 45th state. Also on the seal are sego lilies, which stand for peace and are the state flower.[9]
  • Utah is home to 25 colleges and universities. Two universities, Brigham Young University and the University of Utah are traditionally rivals in several athletic fields. Their annual college game is nicknamed the “Holy War,” mainly because the LDS church owns BYU, while the U is a secular university.[12]
  • A 2012 Gallup poll found that Utah, overall, was the best state to live in. West Virginia, Mississippi, and Kentucky were in the bottom three.[22]
  • Over 2/3 of Utah land is owned by the United States' federal government.[3]
  • Approximately 75 million years ago, Utah was part of a landmass called Laramidia. This land mass was hot, swampy, and full of dinosaurs, which makes Utah one of the best places in the U.S. to find dinosaur fossils. In fact, the world’s largest raptor lived in Utah. Known as the “Utahraptor,” it measured over 23 feet long, making it larger than any other known raptor.[9]
  • Utah has the highest consumption of Jell-O in the United States. In fact, Jell-O is Utah’s state snack.[19]
  • Utah Symbols[3]
    TypeSymbol
    State BirdCalifornia Gull
    State TreeColorado Blue Spruce
    State FlowerSego Lily
    State FishBonneville Cutthroat Trout
    State FruitCherry
    State AnimalElk
    State FossilAllosaurus
    State InsectHoney Bee
    State RockCoal
    State GemTopa
  • The most generous state in America is Utah, which has the highest percentage of volunteers in the country.[16]
  • The Cottonwood Canyons in Utah is one of the snowiest places on earth, with Alta receiving 551 inches of snow annually.[18]
References

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