Why people search for Utah school district maps
District boundaries in Utah don't follow zip codes, city limits, or county lines. A single street can straddle two different districts — and in parts of Utah, one property may sit inside an elementary district and a separate, overlapping high school district at the same time.
In Utah, public schools are primarily funded through local property taxes. The district your address falls in determines which school board levies a tax on your property.
Parents in Utah use district maps to confirm which school their child is zoned for, research open enrollment options, or plan a move around a specific school. District boundaries are the starting point — individual school attendance zones are a second layer within them.
46% of homebuyers ages 30–39 factor school district quality into their neighborhood choice. Buyers researching Utah real estate use this map to confirm district placement before making an offer, and to compare neighboring districts side by side.
Reporters, demographers, and education researchers use Utah district boundary maps to study school funding equity, enrollment trends, demographic shifts, and the relationship between district boundaries and housing patterns.
How Utah organizes its school districts
Utah operates entirely on a Unified District model. Its boundaries are a mix of strict county-lines (mostly in rural areas) and split-county districts in the highly populated Wasatch Front (like Salt Lake and Utah counties) where population density required breaking counties into multiple distinct PK-12 districts.
Common question
Which Utah school district is my address in?
Use the interactive map above to search by address. Because Utah district boundaries don't always align with zip codes or municipal lines, the only reliable way to confirm your district is to look up your specific address. For enrollment or real estate decisions, verify directly with the district's official address lookup tool.
Common question
How many school districts are in Utah?
Utah has 41 geographic school districts in total. The map above shows all district types as separate layers, which can be toggled on or off using the layer switcher control.
Common question
Do Utah school district boundaries affect property taxes?
Yes. Property taxes in Utah are levied at the district level, meaning the district your address falls in directly determines your school tax rate. Homes just across a district boundary can carry meaningfully different tax obligations.
District types shown on this map — Utah
Utah (41 Total Districts)
Utah operates entirely on a Unified District model. Its boundaries are a mix of strict county-lines (mostly in rural areas) and split-county districts in the highly populated Wasatch Front (like Salt Lake and Utah counties) where population density required breaking counties into multiple distinct PK-12 districts.
Unified School Districts (41)
Grades Covered: PK–12
- Alpine School District: ~84,000 students
- Davis School District: ~71,500 students
- Granite School District: ~63,000 students
- Jordan School District: ~57,800 students
- Washington County School District: ~38,500 students
- Nebo School District: ~35,200 students
- Canyons School District: ~33,500 students
- Weber School District: ~33,100 students
- Salt Lake City School District: ~20,000 students
- Cache County School District: ~19,200 students
- Tooele County School District: ~18,500 students
- Box Elder School District: ~12,300 students
- Iron County School District: ~10,800 students
- Provo City School District: ~13,500 students
- Logan City School District: ~5,500 students
- Uintah School District: ~5,400 students
- Wasatch County School District: ~7,400 students
- Murray City School District: ~6,000 students
- Ogden City School District: ~11,000 students
- Sevier School District: ~4,500 students
- Duchesne County School District: ~4,400 students
- San Juan School District: ~2,900 students
- Carbon School District: ~3,400 students
- Millard School District: ~2,800 students
- North Sanpete School District: ~2,500 students
- South Sanpete School District: ~3,200 students
- Park City School District: ~4,600 students
- Emery County School District: ~2,100 students
- Grand County School District: ~1,400 students
- Kane County School District: ~1,300 students
- Garfield County School District: ~900 students
- Morgan County School District: ~3,300 students
- North Summit School District: ~1,000 students
- South Summit School District: ~1,700 students
- Wayne School District: ~450 students
- Juab School District: ~2,700 students
- Beaver County School District: ~1,500 students
- Piute County School District: ~270 students
- Rich School District: ~500 students
- Tintic School District: ~220 students
- Daggett School District: ~180 students