La Sal, Utah · Moving Guide

Moving Guide in La Sal, Utah

Moving Guide for La Sal, Utah homeowners. A full local guide is in production — meanwhile, the Community Resources covers the same material at the state level.

Everything you need to settle into La Sal, Utah — utilities, schools, taxes, internet, trash, DMV, emergency contacts, and government offices, in the order most new residents need them.

Utilities in La Sal

Open accounts for electricity, natural gas, water/sewer, garbage, and internet at least 10 business days before you move in. Sellers should keep service active through possession plus 24 hours.

Transfer playbook: Call Rocky Mountain Power and Dominion Energy 10 business days before closing. Open a San Juan County utility account where municipal service is available; coordinate well, septic, and propane transfers per property. Sellers should keep service active through possession + 24 hours.

Schools in La Sal

La Sal is served by the San Juan School District. Students attend local elementary education with secondary education available through district schools serving the region.

School ratings shown are placeholders. A future integration will display verified ratings.

Property Taxes in La Sal

Property tax in La Sal is assessed and collected at the San Juan County level. Use the lookup below to see the current valuation, levy, and tax history for any parcel.

County assessor and treasurer information will be added soon. Use the Utah Property Tax portal in the meantime.

Government Services in La Sal

City Hall, the recorder, planning & zoning, building permits, public works, utility billing, county offices, voting, and elections — everything you need to interact with local government in La Sal and San Juan County.

DMV & Licensing for La Sal Residents

New Utah residents must transfer driver license and vehicle registration within 60 days of establishing residency. Schedule appointments through the Driver License Division and the DMV — wait times are dramatically shorter with an appointment.

Emergency Services in La Sal

For any life-threatening emergency, dial 911. The contacts below are for non-emergency reporting, statewide resources, and disaster preparedness.

Need a real person?

We help families relocate to La Sal every month — lender, agent, and local contacts in one team.

A full moving guide guide for La Sal is being written. In the meantime, the Community Resources covers the same topic at the statewide level, and the La Sal Town Square links to every resource we publish for the city.

Where this page connects

Get straight answers from a real Utah expert.

A 15-minute call beats hours of online searching. No pressure, no obligation.