Utah Fishing License Guide: Online, Cost & Rules (2026)

Utah DWR License Planner

Utah Fishing License Guide: Online, Cost & Rules

Need a Utah fishing license but not sure whether to buy resident, nonresident, youth, senior, disabled veteran, 3-day, 7-day, multiyear, setline, or Flaming Gorge reciprocal coverage? This guide explains the practical Utah DWR buying path, 2026 costs, age rules, online purchase, mobile app proof, Free Fishing Day, special permits, and the rules to check before fishing Utah lakes, reservoirs, rivers, streams, community ponds and Blue Ribbon waters.

Under 12 no license Resident adult $40 Nonresident adult $120 365 days Free Fishing Day
Fast answer: In Utah, anglers under age 12 do not need a fishing license. Anglers age 12 and older generally need the correct Utah fishing license unless fishing on Free Fishing Day or covered by another official exception. Utah fishing licenses are valid for 365 days from purchase unless you buy a multiyear license. For 2026, a resident adult fishing license age 18–64 costs $40, resident senior age 65+ costs $31, nonresident adult age 18+ costs $120, resident 3-day costs $19, resident 7-day costs $30, nonresident 3-day costs $44, and nonresident 7-day costs $91.

Official App Tip: Store Your Utah Fishing License on Your Phone

Utah DWR’s official mobile app can store fishing, hunting and combination licenses on your device. This is useful if you buy online and want quick proof in the field, but you should still verify your license is current before leaving home.

Open Utah DWR App Page

Video source: Utah Division of Wildlife Resources official YouTube uploads. Video availability may change if YouTube or the channel updates uploads.

Which Utah Fishing License Should You Buy?

Utah’s fishing license choice is mostly about age, residency, trip length and whether you need a special permit. Start with the base fishing license, then check whether a setline permit, Flaming Gorge reciprocal permit, AIS requirement or local water rule affects your trip.

Most Utah adults

Resident 365-Day

Best for Utah residents age 18–64 who will fish more than one short trip during the next year.

Visitors

Nonresident 3-Day, 7-Day or 1-Year

Visitors should compare short-term and annual prices based on how many days they will fish in Utah.

Youth

Age 12–17 License

Utah youth under 12 do not need a license. Youth 12–17 have lower-price license options.

Seniors

Resident 65+ License

Utah resident seniors age 65 and older have a lower-cost fishing license option.

Multiple years

Multiyear License

Useful if you want fewer renewals and plan to fish Utah consistently for up to five years.

Special waters

Setline / Reciprocal Permit

Needed only for specific situations, such as legal setline fishing or reciprocal Flaming Gorge access.

Simple buying rule: If you will fish Utah more than once, a 365-day license is usually the easiest choice. If you are visiting for only a few days, compare the 3-day and 7-day licenses first.

Utah Fishing License Cost: 2026 Resident and Nonresident Fees

Utah prices change by age and residency. Adult nonresident fees are much higher than resident fees, so visitors should compare short-term licenses before buying the annual option.

Resident$4018–64

Resident 1-Year Fishing License

The standard Utah resident adult fishing license. It is valid for 365 days from the date of purchase unless you buy a multiyear license.

Best for most Utah adult anglers.
Nonresident$12018+

Nonresident 1-Year Fishing License

The full annual-style nonresident license for visitors who expect to fish Utah repeatedly during a 365-day period.

Best for frequent visitors, not most short trips.
Resident$512–13

Resident Youth Fishing Age 12–13

Low-cost Utah resident youth license for young anglers who have reached the license age.

Best for Utah resident youth 12–13.
Resident$1614–17

Resident Youth Fishing Age 14–17

Resident teen fishing license for Utah anglers age 14–17.

Best for Utah resident teens.
Nonresident$1812–13

Nonresident Youth Fishing Age 12–13

Nonresident youth license for visiting anglers age 12–13.

Best for visiting youth anglers 12–13.
Nonresident$4414–17

Nonresident Youth Fishing Age 14–17

Nonresident teen fishing license for visiting anglers age 14–17.

Same price as nonresident 3-day adult option.
Senior$3165+

Resident Senior Fishing License

Utah resident anglers age 65 and older can buy the lower-cost senior fishing license.

Best for eligible Utah resident seniors.
Disabled Vet$12Resident

Resident Disabled Veteran Fishing License

Utah resident disabled veterans who qualify can buy a reduced-fee fishing license.

Eligibility and proof rules apply.
Resident$193-Day

Resident 3-Day Fishing License

Short-term resident option for a brief fishing plan.

Good for one weekend or short trip.
Nonresident$443-Day

Nonresident 3-Day Fishing License

Short-term visitor option for a weekend or short vacation.

Best for visitors fishing up to three days.
Resident$307-Day

Resident 7-Day Fishing License

Short-term resident option for a longer week of fishing.

Compare with $40 resident annual before buying.
Nonresident$917-Day

Nonresident 7-Day Fishing License

Short-term visitor option for a full week of Utah fishing.

Compare with $120 nonresident annual.
Cost tip: A resident 7-day license is $30 while a resident adult 365-day license is $40. If you might fish again, the annual resident license can be the better value. For nonresidents, compare $44 for 3 days, $91 for 7 days and $120 for 365 days.

Who Needs a Utah Fishing License?

Utah’s main age rule is simple: anglers under 12 do not need a fishing license. Once an angler is 12 or older, license requirements generally apply unless an official exception covers that situation.

U12

Under 12

Children under 12 do not need a Utah fishing license, but they must still follow limits, seasons and water-specific regulations.

12+

Age 12 and Older

Most anglers age 12 and older need a valid Utah fishing license before fishing, unless an exception applies.

365

365-Day Validity

Utah fishing licenses are valid for 365 days from purchase unless you buy a multiyear license.

FREE

Free Fishing Day

On June 6, 2026, everyone in Utah can fish without a license, but all other fishing laws still apply.

Parent tip: A child under 12 can fish without a license, but an adult who actively fishes while helping the child may need a license. Supervising and fishing are not always treated the same.

How to Buy a Utah Fishing License Online

The official online system is Utah DWR’s wildlife license portal. You can also use DWR offices and authorized license agents where available. Online purchase is usually the fastest way to buy, save and access proof.

Open the official Utah DWR license portal

Use wildlifelicense.utah.gov or start from wildlife.utah.gov. Avoid unofficial pages when entering personal information or payment details.

Choose fishing, combination or short-term

Select the product that matches your residency, age and trip length. If you only fish, do not buy a combination license unless you also need hunting privileges.

Check youth, senior or disabled veteran pricing

Utah prices vary heavily by age and eligibility. Choose the correct category before checkout.

Add special permits only if needed

Setline fishing and Flaming Gorge reciprocal access are not standard needs for every angler. Add them only when your exact trip requires them.

Save your license proof

Print a copy, save a PDF or download it into the Utah Hunting & Fishing mobile app before your trip.

Utah 3-Day and 7-Day Fishing Licenses: Best for Short Trips?

Short-term licenses are convenient, but they are not always the best value. Compare the short-term price against the 365-day license if there is any chance you will fish Utah again.

Angler 3-Day 7-Day 1-Year Best value note
Resident adult $19 $30 $40 If you may fish again, the $40 365-day license is often better.
Nonresident adult $44 $91 $120 For a full week, compare $91 vs $120 carefully.
Youth Varies by age/residency Varies by age/residency Often cheaper as a youth annual Check youth annual pricing first before buying a short-term product.

Utah Youth, Senior and Disabled Veteran Fishing License Rules

Utah has several lower-cost categories. These are useful, but they depend on age, residency and eligibility.

12

Youth Under 12

No Utah fishing license is needed for anglers under 12. Regulations still apply to the fish they catch and keep.

13

Age 12–13

Resident youth age 12–13 pay $5 for a 1-year fishing license. Nonresident youth age 12–13 pay $18.

17

Age 14–17

Resident youth age 14–17 pay $16. Nonresident youth age 14–17 pay $44.

65

Resident Senior 65+

Utah resident anglers age 65 and older can buy the $31 senior fishing license.

VET

Resident Disabled Veteran

Eligible Utah resident disabled veterans may qualify for the $12 fishing license and multiyear pricing at that reduced rate.

ID

Carry Proof

Youth, senior and disabled veteran categories should carry proof of age, residency or eligibility when needed.

Utah Multiyear Fishing Licenses: When They Make Sense

Utah offers multiyear fishing licenses up to five years for several categories. Multiyear licenses reduce renewal hassle and can be slightly cheaper per year for adult residents and nonresidents.

$39

Resident Adult Multiyear

Resident adults age 18–64 can purchase multiyear fishing licenses at $39 per year, up to five years.

$119

Nonresident Adult Multiyear

Nonresident adults can purchase multiyear fishing licenses at $119 per year, up to five years.

$31

Resident Senior Multiyear

Resident seniors age 65+ can use the senior annual rate for multiyear license calculations.

Multiyear tip: Multiyear licenses are convenient, but youth multiyear rules can use adult rates. For young anglers, compare the youth annual price before choosing multiyear.

Utah Setline Fishing Permit and Flaming Gorge Reciprocal Permit

Most Utah anglers do not need these special permits. Add them only when your method or water requires them.

$22

Resident Setline Permit

Resident setline fishing permit costs $22 and is valid only when used with a current fishing license.

$48

Nonresident Setline Permit

Nonresident setline fishing permit costs $48 and is valid only with a current fishing license.

$59

Flaming Gorge Reciprocal Permit

The Flaming Gorge reciprocal permit costs $59 and is used for specific reciprocal access situations. Read current Utah and Wyoming rules before relying on it.

Utah Free Fishing Day 2026

Utah’s 2026 Free Fishing Day is Saturday, June 6, 2026. Everyone in Utah can fish without a license that day, but all other fishing laws and rules still apply.

JUN

June 6, 2026

The one day in 2026 when you do not need a license to fish in Utah.

REG

Rules Still Apply

Limits, seasons, water closures, special regulations and legal methods still apply on Free Fishing Day.

TRY

Good Beginner Day

Use Free Fishing Day to introduce kids, family members or first-time anglers before buying a license.

A Utah Fishing License Is Not the Same as Permission to Keep Every Fish

Buying the license is only step one. Utah has statewide regulations plus water-specific rules that can change by reservoir, river, lake, stream, species, season and emergency order.

BAG

Daily Limits

Check the Utah Fishing Guidebook for species limits before keeping trout, bass, walleye, kokanee, tiger muskie, catfish or other species.

SIZE

Size and Slot Limits

Some waters have special size limits, slot limits, catch-and-release rules or closed areas.

WAT

Water-Specific Rules

A rule that applies at one reservoir may not apply at another. Check the exact water before fishing.

AIS

Aquatic Invasive Species

Boaters must pay attention to Utah’s mussel-aware requirements, decontamination, inspection and watercraft rules.

ICE

Ice Fishing

Ice fishing still requires a license if you are 12 or older unless fishing on Free Fishing Day or under an exemption.

MAP

Fish Utah Map

Use Fish Utah to find waters, species, access, stocking, records and location-specific planning details.

Utah Fishing License Mistakes to Avoid

Most Utah license mistakes happen because anglers buy the wrong duration, forget the age rule, skip special permit checks or assume the license covers every water-specific rule.

Before Buying

  • Do not buy a 7-day resident license for $30 if you will likely fish again and can buy the $40 365-day license.
  • Do not buy a nonresident annual license for one weekend without comparing the $44 3-day license.
  • Do not buy setline or reciprocal permits unless your trip actually requires them.
  • Do not use youth pricing for the wrong age or residency category.
  • Do not forget that licenses are valid 365 days from purchase, not just a calendar year.

Before Fishing

  • Download or print your license proof.
  • Check the Utah Fishing Guidebook for the specific water.
  • Check emergency changes, closures and special limits.
  • Check AIS and watercraft requirements if boating.
  • Check whether your child under 12 is fishing alone or an adult is also actively fishing.
Biggest mistake: Buying the license and skipping the guidebook. Utah’s license allows you to fish, but the Utah Fishing Guidebook and current rules decide seasons, limits, legal methods and water-specific exceptions.

Official Utah Fishing License Links

Use these official Utah DWR links for final decisions. This guide explains the process, but Utah DWR controls license products, fees, special permits, exemptions, guidebooks and emergency changes.

Independent guide note: FishingLicenseInfo.org is an independent educational guide and is not Utah Division of Wildlife Resources or a government agency. Always verify license type, fees, age rules, exemptions, special permits, Free Fishing Day, AIS rules and regulations directly with official Utah DWR sources before buying or fishing.

Utah Fishing License FAQ

How much is a Utah fishing license in 2026?

A resident adult Utah fishing license age 18–64 costs $40. A nonresident adult fishing license age 18+ costs $120. Resident youth fees are $5 for age 12–13 and $16 for age 14–17. Nonresident youth fees are $18 for age 12–13 and $44 for age 14–17. Resident senior age 65+ is $31.

Can I buy a Utah fishing license online?

Yes. You can buy a Utah fishing license online through the official Utah DWR license portal at wildlifelicense.utah.gov.

Who needs a Utah fishing license?

Anglers age 12 and older generally need a valid Utah fishing license unless an official exception applies. Children under 12 do not need a Utah fishing license.

How long is a Utah fishing license valid?

Utah fishing licenses are valid for 365 days from the date of purchase unless you buy a multiyear license.

How much is a Utah nonresident fishing license?

A nonresident adult Utah 1-year fishing license costs $120 in 2026. Nonresident 3-day fishing costs $44, and nonresident 7-day fishing costs $91.

How much is a Utah youth fishing license?

Resident youth age 12–13 pay $5, resident youth age 14–17 pay $16, nonresident youth age 12–13 pay $18, and nonresident youth age 14–17 pay $44.

Do kids need a Utah fishing license?

Children under 12 do not need a Utah fishing license. Once an angler is 12 or older, a license is generally required unless an official exception applies.

What is Utah Free Fishing Day in 2026?

Utah Free Fishing Day is Saturday, June 6, 2026. Everyone in Utah can fish without a license that day, but all other fishing laws and rules still apply.

Can I store my Utah fishing license on my phone?

Yes. Utah DWR’s official Utah Hunting & Fishing mobile app can store fishing, hunting and combination licenses on your mobile device.

What is the Utah setline fishing permit?

The Utah setline fishing permit is a special permit valid only with a current fishing license. It costs $22 for residents and $48 for nonresidents in 2026.

What is the Flaming Gorge reciprocal permit?

The Flaming Gorge reciprocal permit costs $59 and applies to specific reciprocal fishing situations. Read current Utah and Wyoming rules before relying on it.

Where should I verify Utah fishing license rules?

Verify through the Utah DWR license portal, Utah DWR fees page, 2026 Utah Fishing Guidebook, Fish Utah map and current Utah DWR regulation updates before buying or fishing.

Final Take: Pick the Utah License by Age, Residency and Trip Length

The best Utah fishing license choice starts with age. Children under 12 do not need a license. Youth 12–17 have lower-cost license categories. Utah resident adults usually choose the $40 365-day license, while resident seniors age 65+ have a $31 option. Nonresident adults should compare the $44 3-day, $91 7-day and $120 365-day license before paying.

After choosing the base license, check whether your trip needs anything extra: a setline permit, Flaming Gorge reciprocal permit, AIS compliance, water-specific rules, emergency changes, or a multiyear license. The safest habit is simple: buy through Utah DWR, store or print your proof, download the current guidebook, and verify the exact water before fishing.

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