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Tax year 2026

Utah Property Tax Calculator (2026)

Direct Answer

The Utah median effective property tax rate is 0.52% for 2026 — median real-estate taxes paid divided by median home value (U.S. Census Bureau ACS 2024). On a $400,000 home that is about $2,080 a year (~$173 a month). Utah ranks #42 of 51 nationally. Enter your home value below for an instant estimate, then confirm the exact rate with your county.

What is the Utah property tax rate in 2026?

Utah's median effective property tax rate is 0.52%. On the state median home value of $489,400, the typical bill is about $2,525 a year.

How much is property tax on a $400,000 home in Utah?

About $2,080 a year, or roughly $173 a month, at the 0.52% median effective rate.

Where does Utah rank nationally?

Utah ranks #42 of 51 by median effective rate (1 = highest), among the lowest in the country. That is 0.42% below the 0.94% US average.

Is this my exact property tax bill?

No. Your county sets the millage and assessed value. This uses the state median; homestead, senior, and veteran exemptions can lower your bill.

Utah Property Tax Calculator (2026)

Rates updated 2026 (U.S. Census Bureau ACS 2024). Live estimate — state median effective rate.

Home value$400,000
Estimated annual property tax$2,080
Estimated monthly (escrow)$173
Utah median effective rate0.52%
National rank: #42 of 51 (1 = highest)US avg: 0.94%

Utah's median effective property tax rate is 0.42% below the US average of 0.94%. Your county, assessed value, and exemptions will change the actual bill.

How does property tax work in Utah?

Utah property tax is set locally, not by the state. Your county assessor values your home, then applies a local millage (tax) rate. Cities, school districts, and special districts each add a share.

Because rates vary by county, this page uses the Utah median effective rate of 0.52%. That is the median tax paid divided by the median home value, from the U.S. Census Bureau (ACS 2024). It is a benchmark, not your exact bill.

How much is property tax on a home in Utah?

Home valueRate (0.52%)Annual taxMonthly
$200,0000.52%$1,040$87
$400,0000.52%$2,080$173
$489,400 (state median)0.52%$2,525$210
$750,0000.52%$3,900$325

How do you calculate Utah property tax by hand?

  1. Find your home's assessed value on your county notice.
  2. Apply your county's assessment ratio if it uses one.
  3. Multiply the taxable value by the local millage (tax) rate.
  4. For a quick estimate, multiply your home value by 0.52% (the Utah median effective rate).

What exemptions can lower your Utah property tax?

Most counties offer a homestead exemption on your primary home. Many add relief for seniors, veterans, and people with disabilities. These lower your taxable value, so your real rate is often below the median.

Rules and amounts vary by county and change over time. Check your county assessor for the exemptions you qualify for before relying on a figure.

Why is your actual Utah bill different from this estimate?

Three things move your bill away from the state median. Your county rate may be higher or lower than the median. Your assessed value can lag the market. And exemptions reduce the taxable amount.

Use this page to budget and compare. For the exact number, use your latest assessment notice and your county's current millage rate.

How does property tax vary by county in Utah?

Property tax in Utah is set and collected at the county level, so your rate depends on where you live. Across Utah's 29 counties, the effective rate ranges from 0.27% in Garfield County to 0.62% in Emery County. The table lists every county's effective rate, median home value, and median tax paid (U.S. Census Bureau ACS 2024).

CountyEffective rateMedian home valueMedian tax
Beaver County0.36%$283,700$1,142
Box Elder County0.47%$403,600$1,966
Cache County0.46%$444,400$2,011
Carbon County0.62%$228,500$1,394
Daggett County0.53%$282,300$1,304
Davis County0.51%$505,500$2,665
Duchesne County0.56%$283,700$1,742
Emery County0.62%$218,700$1,350
Garfield County0.27%$318,100$1,127
Grand County0.4%$538,700$2,215
Iron County0.43%$379,000$1,558
Juab County0.37%$425,400$1,914
Kane County0.41%$410,900$1,630
Millard County0.5%$284,700$1,454
Morgan County0.52%$654,900$3,411
Piute County0.32%$264,800$939
Rich County0.34%$334,600$859
Salt Lake County0.5%$525,700$2,836
San Juan County0.39%$224,200$1,788
Sanpete County0.47%$347,200$1,619
Sevier County0.49%$311,200$1,683
Summit County0.32%$1,067,700$3,701
Tooele County0.54%$431,600$2,460
Uintah County0.49%$298,600$1,523
Utah County0.43%$538,700$2,370
Wasatch County0.49%$787,300$3,624
Washington County0.41%$510,700$2,158
Wayne County0.38%$411,800$1,394
Weber County0.56%$426,700$2,557

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Verified by our data team

Last updated: June 21, 2026. Effective rates verified against the U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey (ACS) 2024 — median real-estate taxes paid divided by median owner-occupied home value — and cross-checked with the Tax Foundation and Construction Coverage 2026 compilations.

What are the most frequently asked questions?

  • Utah's median effective property tax rate is 0.52% (median tax paid divided by median home value, U.S. Census Bureau ACS 2024). Your county rate may differ.

  • About $1,560 a year, or roughly $130 a month, at the 0.52% median effective rate before exemptions.

  • Your county assesses your home's value and applies a local millage rate. For a fast estimate, multiply your home value by the 0.52% Utah median rate.

  • Most Utah counties offer a homestead exemption on a primary residence, and many add senior, veteran, and disability relief. Amounts vary by county — confirm with your assessor.

  • This uses the state median rate. Your county may tax above the median, your assessed value may differ, and exemptions change the taxable amount.

Disclaimer: this page is for educational and estimation purposes only; it is property-tax research, NOT tax or legal advice. Property tax is assessed locally by your county and municipality. Figures use each state's median effective rate (U.S. Census Bureau ACS 2024); your county, assessed value, and exemptions (homestead, senior, veteran, disability) will change the actual bill. Always confirm with your county assessor or a qualified professional.