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Utah Property Tax Rates by County (2026)

Compare effective property tax rates across 29 Utah counties. Homeowners who believe their property is over-assessed can appeal their assessment. The deadline to appeal is September 15.

Effective Tax Rate

0.49%

Lower than the national median of 1.02%

Median Home Value

$350,900

Median Annual Tax Bill

$1,603

How Are Property Taxes Calculated in Utah?

Property taxes in Utah are based on the assessed value of your property multiplied by local tax rates set by school districts, municipalities, and other taxing authorities. The median effective tax rate across Utah counties is 0.49%, which is below the national median of 1.02%.

If you believe your property's assessed value is too high, you have the right to appeal the assessment. TaxDrop handles the entire process — you only pay if we save you $500 or more.

All 29 Utah Counties

CountyEff. Tax RateMedian Home ValueMedian Annual Tax Bill
Beaver County0.39%$287,600$1,121
Box Elder County0.51%$357,400$1,828
Cache County0.49%$392,800$1,929
Carbon County0.64%$200,700$1,288
Daggett County0.48%$242,100$1,164
Davis County0.54%$470,500$2,546
Duchesne County0.64%$253,600$1,611
Emery County0.58%$197,100$1,151
Garfield County0.38%$285,800$1,087
Grand County0.42%$480,900$2,012
Iron County0.42%$342,900$1,444
Juab County0.46%$369,800$1,708
Kane County0.42%$350,900$1,470
Millard County0.54%$246,400$1,319
Morgan County0.54%$600,900$3,264
Piute County0.43%$235,400$1,014
Rich County0.29%$291,200$846
Salt Lake County0.56%$484,500$2,726
San Juan County0.84%$189,900$1,603
Sanpete County0.51%$300,400$1,536
Sevier County0.55%$274,100$1,513
Summit County0.35%$1,000,400$3,469
Tooele County0.59%$391,300$2,303
Uintah County0.54%$270,200$1,447
Utah County0.46%$489,200$2,234
Wasatch County0.45%$724,400$3,230
Washington County0.45%$465,600$2,076
Wayne County0.35%$364,800$1,274
Weber County0.62%$389,200$2,415

29 of 29 results

Key Highlights

Highest Tax Rate

0.84%

San Juan County

Lowest Tax Rate

0.29%

Rich County

Highest Tax Bill

$3,469

Summit County

Lowest Tax Bill

$846

Rich County

Think your property is over-assessed?

TaxDrop helps Utah homeowners appeal their property tax assessment. You pay nothing unless we save you $500 or more.

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How to Appeal Your Utah Property Taxes

Filing a property tax appeal in Utah is your legal right. Here is the basic process:

  1. Review your annual assessment notice from your local assessor.
  2. File your appeal before the deadline (September 15).
  3. Gather evidence: recent comparable sales, photos of property condition issues, and any independent appraisals.
  4. Attend a hearing or submit your evidence for review.
  5. Receive a decision on your assessed value.

TaxDrop handles this entire process for you. Our experts analyze your property, build your case, and represent you. You only pay if we save you $500 or more.

Stop overpaying on property taxes

30-60% of properties are over-assessed, but only 5% of homeowners challenge their bill. TaxDrop makes it easy to fight back. No upfront cost. No fee if we save you less than $500.

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