What the Ordinance Actually Means
Salt Lake County's chicken licensing system is free and unusually permissive. The 3-foot property line setback is the most lenient of any U.S. city in our database, and the 15-hen limit is generously high. Roosters are technically allowed under the ordinance but are routinely cited under noise regulations — in practice, most urban chicken keepers in SLC do not keep roosters. Apply for the free license through Salt Lake County Animal Services.
Where to Apply for Your Permit
Salt Lake County Animal Services, 511 W 3900 S — 385-468-7387
Before going in person, call ahead to confirm current hours, whether online applications are accepted, and the exact documents required. Application requirements can change without updates to the city's public-facing website.
What You'll Need at Application
While requirements vary slightly by city, most Salt Lake City, UT chicken permit applications require:
- Completed application form (available from the office above or on the city's website)
- A hand-drawn site plan showing your lot dimensions, house location, and proposed coop position with setback measurements to property lines and neighboring homes
- Number of hens requested (do not exceed the city maximum)
- Permit fee (cash, check, or card — confirm accepted payment methods)
- Neighbor notification forms if required (see the At a Glance box above)
Coop Requirements in Salt Lake City, UT
Most cities require coops to meet basic standards regardless of whether a formal permit is required:
- Fully enclosed — walls, roof, and floor or predator-proof skirting
- Predator-proof — hardware cloth (not chicken wire) over all openings; buried or skirted to prevent digging predators
- Weather-tight — protects hens from rain, wind, and temperature extremes
- Maintained — no accumulated waste, no visible rodent activity, no standing water
- Located in the rear yard as specified above
The most frequent reasons people get cited for backyard chicken violations in this city: exceeding the hen limit, keeping a rooster, and coop setback violations. Measure your setbacks before building — not after.