Search Utah Phone Directory
The Utah Phone Directory helps you sort state offices, court contacts, public safety agencies, county numbers, and city departments before a simple search turns into a chain of wrong calls. Utah spreads useful phone information across state agency sites, county pages, and local city directories, so one broad search often is not enough. This page brings those paths together in one starting point. Use it when you need to find a Utah office, check which level of government handles a service, or move from a state agency to a county or city phone directory without losing the local context.
Utah Directory Facts
Utah Phone Directory Basics
The best statewide starting point for a Utah Phone Directory search is the official Utah state government directory portal. It points toward Utah agencies without forcing you to guess whether a contact belongs with the courts, tax administration, public safety, licensing, or another state office. That matters because statewide phone searches break down fast when the office level is unclear. Some questions belong with Utah itself. Others belong with a county or city. A strong Utah Phone Directory page should help you separate those paths instead of flattening them together.
Utah also works across several layers at once. A city may handle a local police line, utility service, or recorder question. A county may hold property, jail, or court-side functions. The state then takes over with agency matters such as tax administration, court administration, driver licensing, or statewide public safety support. That is why a state homepage alone is not enough. The Utah Phone Directory is most useful when it tells you which layer to search first and when to switch from state to county or city.
The image below comes from the official Utah state government portal. It is a practical first view for a Utah Phone Directory search because it shows the statewide entry point before the search narrows to a local office.
That statewide gateway matters because it keeps the first search on official ground. From there, you can move down to the court, county, or city layer that owns the actual phone line.
Utah Phone Directory State Services
State agency contact work in Utah is spread across several strong official sites. The Utah State Tax Commission handles tax questions, business registration paths, and payment-related state contacts. The Utah Office of the Attorney General gives a separate route for statewide legal enforcement and consumer-facing state matters. The Utah Bureau of Criminal Identification handles identity and criminal-history related services. Those are not county desks, and they are not city desks. A clear Utah Phone Directory should keep them on the state side where they belong.
The Utah Driver License Division is another good example. Project research identifies a Salt Lake City office and a Heber City office, both using 801-965-4437 as the division contact line. That is a state service with local locations, not a city-run office. The difference matters. Many Utah phone searches start with a place name and then drift toward the wrong government. A state division office inside a city still belongs to the state layer. The Utah Phone Directory should say that plainly.
The image below comes from the official Utah State Tax Commission. It shows one of the stronger statewide contact hubs in the Utah Phone Directory because tax questions often need state routing from the first call.
That state tax view is useful because it reminds the caller that some Utah services stay fully at the state level. If the office is statewide, searching city by city usually wastes time.
Utah Phone Directory Court And Records Paths
The official Utah State Courts website is one of the most important resources in the Utah Phone Directory because it helps separate court administration from city hall and county administration. A local city may have a justice court. A county may host district court functions. But the statewide court system still controls the main court framework, court locations, forms, and many public-facing search tools. That makes the courts site one of the most reliable statewide starting points when a Utah phone search touches records, filings, or judicial administration.
Utah public-record access also runs through GRAMA, the Government Records Access and Management Act. The project research includes state-level GRAMA references, and the law itself is codified under Utah Code Title 63G, Chapter 2. That matters because many phone searches end with a records request rather than a live answer on the first call. A Utah Phone Directory page should not treat records work as a separate world. It should show how a phone call often leads to a city recorder, a county office, or a state agency records path governed by the same basic Utah records framework.
The image below comes from the official Utah State Courts site. It is one of the strongest statewide phone directory references because it helps callers decide when a search belongs with the courts instead of a county office or city desk.
The courts image helps because it keeps the phone search tied to the right branch of government. Court work has its own routing, and Utah makes that visible at the state level.
Utah Phone Directory Safety Contacts
Public safety contact paths in Utah often cross local and state lines, which is why they need their own place on this page. The official Bureau of Criminal Identification handles statewide identity and records-related services. The Attorney General's Office handles statewide legal enforcement work and public contact routes that do not belong with a city police department or a county sheriff's office. Those are not interchangeable. A caller searching for a Utah Phone Directory should know whether the need is local law enforcement, county custody, or state-level criminal-justice administration.
This is also where local pages on the site become useful. Many city pages built in this project include police, recorder, public works, and court-side contact paths. The county pages pick up the next layer. The state safety and justice agencies then fill in the parts that local government does not own. That sequence matters. It keeps the search narrow. It also helps the caller ask the right first question instead of relying on a broad statewide phrase and hoping the number is close enough.
The image below comes from the official Utah Bureau of Criminal Identification. It shows a statewide safety-related contact path that belongs in the Utah Phone Directory but not in a city-only directory.
That statewide safety image is useful because it draws a clear line between local police contact and state-administered identification and records functions.
Utah Phone Directory Legal Contacts
The official Utah Attorney General site is another strong statewide branch in the Utah Phone Directory. It gives a route for statewide legal matters, public consumer concerns that rise above the city level, and agency contact paths that should not be routed through a courthouse clerk or a city manager line. That distinction is worth making because Utah phone searches often start with a problem, not an agency name. The faster you can match the problem to the level of government, the faster the call becomes useful.
The same rule applies to broad state administration. A tax question belongs with the Tax Commission. A statewide legal enforcement or consumer complaint question may belong with the Attorney General. A court administration question belongs with the Utah Courts. A Utah Phone Directory page should make those differences visible in plain language. That keeps the user from calling three offices to learn what one office already owns.
The image below comes from the official Utah Office of the Attorney General. It helps anchor the legal and enforcement side of the Utah Phone Directory in a clearly statewide office.
That legal contact view matters because it reinforces the statewide branch of the directory. Some calls start local, but others belong with Utah from the outset.
Utah Phone Directory Search Tips
Search by government level first, then by office name. That is the fastest way to use the Utah Phone Directory well. If the issue is local, start with the city or county page. If it is statewide, start with the agency. If it touches courts, stay with the Utah courts path first and then narrow by county or local court. Utah is much easier to search when the office level is clear before the phone number hunt begins.
- Use state agency names for tax, licensing, statewide safety, and statewide legal matters.
- Use county pages for recorder, sheriff, jail, and many district court support contacts.
- Use city pages for city hall, local police, utilities, public works, and city recorder routes.
- Use office names such as recorder, finance, police, or public works instead of broad topic words alone.
- When a city is not tied to a county page in this build, use the county index to keep the search honest.
Note: The best Utah phone search usually names both the office level and the office family, such as Utah courts, Davis County recorder, or Provo public works.
County And City Pages
Use the county and city directories below when a Utah Phone Directory search needs to move from statewide agencies into local offices. The county pages cover the counties included in this build. The city pages cover all target cities from the project manifest and research set.