Heading into the Utah Legislature’s 2025 legislative session set to convene next week, Gov. Spencer Cox and Republican legislative leaders are eager to cut taxes for a fifth year in a row, adding to their running total of more than $1.2 billion in tax cuts since 2021.
But even as they continue to chip away at the state’s income tax base — saying they eventually want to see Utah get rid of its income tax entirely — a weighty policy issue continues to loom unaddressed.
Tax reform.
Cox acknowledged it Tuesday during an annual conference hosted by the Utah Taxpayers Association, a tax watchdog group, at the Little America Hotel in Salt Lake City. He repeated a warning he issued last year, when lawmakers were gearing up for their fourth tax cut — that if they’re going to continue to cut the state’s income tax rate with the ultimate goal of eliminating the tax altogether, they need to at some point have a larger discussion to overhaul Utah’s tax system.
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“Look, I said this last year and I will just say it again. We’ve got to get really serious about what our tax code looks like moving forward,” Cox said. “I feel like we’re kind of piecemealing it along, and I don’t think that’s a great way to do things.”
Utah Legislature poised to cut taxes for 5th year in a row — but how?
Cox, who this month began his second term as Utah’s governor, reiterated his call for Utah lawmakers to tackle tax reform in response to a question from an audience member about any future tax policy priorities his administration may have for his next four years. Cox has promised 2028 will be his last year as governor, saying he will not seek a third term.
Cox has, however, supported and signed all of the Legislature’s recent income tax cuts — and he said he would support another one if that’s what lawmakers opt to do.
While Cox this year is pushing to totally repeal the state’s Social Security income tax (which he reiterated is a form of an income tax cut), he said he would also support an income tax rate cut. Or both, if lawmakers find the money.
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“If we can fit it in the budget, and we’ll look at what those final numbers are, I would be willing to support that,” Cox said.
But expecting a tighter budget year thanks to lower than expected revenue estimates for 2025, legislative leaders at the helm of Utah’s Republican-controlled Legislature have both signaled they have their own preferences. House Speaker Mike Schultz and Senate President Stuart Adams said they’re inclined to support another income tax rate cut and maybe a scaled-back version of Cox’s Social Security proposal, by expanding the number of Utah taxpayers eligible for the Social Security benefit tax credit rather than eliminating the tax entirely.
Cox acknowledged that lawmakers can choose to disregard his budget recommendation — but he defended his proposal to eliminate the state’s tax on Social Security benefits, saying, “I handed you a gift this year.”
“This is, I would say, easily the most popular proposal that I’ve made in the past four years judging by the interaction that we’ve had,” Cox said, jokingly adding, “I also lament what will happen to you if you don’t do it, so good luck with that.” Utah Gov. Spencer Cox speaks at the Utah Taxpayers Association’s annual conference at The Little America Hotel in Salt Lake City on Dec. 14, 2024. (Courtesy of the Governor’s Office)
Cox reminds tax reform is still needed
Even though legislative leaders have said they don’t expect a broad tax reform discussion during the 2025 session, Cox said that’s something lawmakers will need to confront at some point.
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“Are we going to eventually eliminate income tax? I said I would support that,” the governor said. “But we have to look at what that looks like.”
Though it may initially sound like an appealing prospect for Utah taxpayers, Cox pointed to states like Texas that don’t have an income tax, but rely on higher property taxes.
“I hear people all the time say, ‘I want to be like Texas.’ I’m like, ‘Great, let’s eliminate the income tax just like Texas,’” Cox said, though he urged Utahns to realize that would mean maybe tripling their current property tax bills. He said he asks, ‘Is that what you prefer?’ And they’re like, ‘Oh, well, maybe not.’”
“So I think it’s a mistake to just keep piecemealing things,” he said. “I think we have to decide … What is the optimal vision of that? And then let’s do it. … Let’s not just do five basis points here and 10 basis points there and keep doing this. Let’s do it. Let’s get real about it.”
Cox, however, didn’t offer specifics on how he’d like Utah to undertake tax reform.
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“I have some ideas,” he said, “but I’m not a tax expert.” He welcomed the Utah Taxpayers Association and others to get involved in the discussion.
Utah State Tax Commissioner John Valentine also spoke in front of Tuesday’s conference, fielding questions from the crowd — which included a fair share of legislators.
When one audience member asked if Utah’s “three-legged stool” for tax policy is “still solid” — referring to the three most prominent taxes supporting state government and public schools (income tax, sales tax and property tax) — Valentine indicated it’s stable for now, but could reach a tipping point sometime in the future, especially if lawmakers continue to reduce income tax revenue. Utah State Tax Commissioner John Valentine speaks at the Utah Taxpayers Association’s annual conference at The Little America Hotel in Salt Lake City on Dec. 14, 2024. (Courtesy of the Utah Senate)
“The governor is correct,” he said, “that at some point in time you’ll end up like Texas or like Florida where you have to rely on some other tax. And most of the time, they’ve gone to either a significant sales tax increase or a significant property tax increase — or both.”
Valentine said Texas’ property taxes are now four times higher than Utah’s. He added that property taxes can sometimes be problematic and challenging for homeowners when their bills fluctuate unexpectedly.
“Property taxes are particularly difficult for me,” Valentine said, adding that “property taxes are tough for people because it comes all at once. It comes as a big amount. And there’s not sometimes a reasonable relationship between the value of the property you’re in and the ability you have to pay a large property tax bill. Because the property may have increased in value, but your overall wealth and well-being and income has not.”
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So Valentine cautioned against taking that approach if lawmakers opt to eventually completely repeal the state’s income tax.
“I don’t like the idea of trying to push it more on property taxes,” he said. “I agree with the governor on that one. That’s a little scary.”
Why has tax reform been tabled?
Pressed by Utah News Dispatch on the governor’s call for a larger tax reform discussion and why that debate has been tabled for another year, Schultz pointed to the Legislature’s last tax reform attempt that crashed and burned.
“Because we remember what it was like a few years ago when we had that discussion,” Schultz said, prompting some knowing chuckles from the crowd.
In 2019, the Utah Legislature passed legislation to raise sales taxes on food, gas and some other services while reducing the income tax rate from 4.95% to 4.66% — but lawmakers repealed it soon after amid backlash fueling a referendum effort that was on track to qualify for the ballot.
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The list of services that would have been taxed was whittled away repeatedly as the tax reform package wound its way through the Legislature, to the point that even some supporters said they wished it was more comprehensive by the time it came to a vote in the House and Senate. In the end, it would have taxed services including Uber rides, streaming media, dating referrals, pet boarding, towing, newspaper subscriptions, and a handful of other services, the Deseret News reported.
Utah’s last tax reform attempt crashed and burned. What now?
While they have lowered income taxes over the past four — going on five — years and have now surpassed the income tax rate cut proposed in 2019, Utah lawmakers haven’t since taken another stab at such sweeping tax reform.
That’s even though pundits including former Gov. Mike Leavitt have urged them to muster up the political courage to do so in order to confront an evolving economy and a budgetary structural imbalance between sales tax revenue and income tax revenue that will eventually become impossible to ignore.
Schultz said he still stands by that 2019 effort. “What we came up with would reduce the tax burdens for the citizens of the state,” he said, but “the problem is it was so complicated the citizens of the state didn’t get it. And it was hard.”
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The House speaker added “we’re not to that point yet” of needing to revisit that debate, “but you know, down the road, future legislatures will have to have that discussion.”
Schultz said for now “we don’t see anything on the horizon” to force the tax reform discussion this year, adding “we’ve got a few years before that becomes a big issue.”
“It will have to happen,” he said. “Those discussions will have to come at some point in time. But it’s not a top priority right now … there’s other things to focus on.”
Legislative proposals for 2025 — so far
Currently Utahns who receive Social Security are already eligible for a tax credit if their household income is no more than $75,000. While Cox wants to do away with that tax completely, some 2025 legislative proposals have surfaced to partially answer his call by simply increasing that income threshold to some other amount lawmakers settle on.
With recently filed HB130, Rep. Walt Brooks, R-St. George, has proposed giving a partial Social Security tax cut by increasing the income threshold to $90,000 for households, $54,000 for single filers (up from $45,000) and $45,000 for married filing separately (up from $37,500).
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Meanwhile, Rep. Kay Christofferson, R-Lehi, has filed a bill, HB106, to lower the income tax rate from 4.55% to 4.45%. According to State Tax Commission estimates, that would cost the state about $160 million — the entirety of the amount the Executive Appropriations Committee already set aside in December to be used for some type of tax cut. Cox’s proposed Social Security repeal would cost roughly $143 million.
Another proposal that Valentine said will be “interesting” to watch is SB85, from Sen. Lincoln Fillmore, R-South Jordan. He’s proposing that the state use a formula to automatically reduce its income tax rate when the state’s actual revenue exceeds forecasted revenue starting in 2026.
Another income tax rate cut already has some political steam, with Schultz, R-Hooper, and Adams, R-Layton, both saying Tuesday they want to cut Utah’s income tax rate for a fifth year — “again, again, again, again, and hopefully this year again,” as Adams put it. Utah Senate President Stuart Adams, R-Layton, speaks at the Utah Taxpayers Association’s annual conference at The Little America Hotel in Salt Lake City on Dec. 14, 2024. (Courtesy of the Utah Senate)
Schultz spent most of his speech during Tuesday’s conference talking about one of his top priorities: higher education “reform.” He has challenged leaders of Utah’s public universities to find “inefficiencies” and cut “low-performing” programs while expanding other programs like nursing, engineering and computer science to better “align” the system with workforce demands.
On taxes, however, Schultz again said he’d be supportive of reducing Social Security taxes — but only partially — while also providing another income tax rate cut.
“We have a limited amount of money. If we had all the money … I’d love to go all the way and take the Social Security tax completely off the table,” the House speaker said.
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But given this year’s limited revenue, Schultz said he’d like to raise the Social Security tax income thresholds “where high-income earners continue to pay Social Security taxes. However, the rest of that money I would like to take and give every citizen of the state who pays income taxes a tax cut.”
Adams also said he’d be in favor of a partial Social Security tax cut by maybe moving the income threshold to perhaps $100,000. “But we also have young families paying income tax that need a tax break too,” he said, so “my hope is that we cut income tax for a fifth year in a row.”
Across-the-board income tax rate cuts, however, disproportionately benefit the wealthy over low-income earners. Cox has also proposed another expansion to the state’s child tax credit for families of up to four children. That would cost the state about $2.1 million.
“One of the No. 1 things we hear is the cost of inflation is hitting home with families, young families,” Schultz said. “Doing everything we can to continue to reduce their tax burden, I think, is every bit as important as reducing it for high-income earners.”
Schultz said he had “no doubt that sooner or later” lawmakers will eliminate Utah’s Social Security tax completely, but he questioned whether this year, “when we don’t have a lot of revenue, is this the right year to do it?” Still, he said he’d like to “see everybody get a tax cut.”
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Elections, higher ed, immigration: 3 big issues to expect from the 2025 Utah Legislature
House Minority Leader Angela Romero, D-Salt Lake City, said she’s supportive of the governor’s Social Security tax cut proposal, but she’s opposed to another income tax rate cut, noting it would result in hardly noticeable savings for low-income earners.
“I’d like to see that money put in other spaces,” she said, pointing to issues in need of more funding including homeless and housing services.
At least one Republican lawmaker, though, isn’t keen on repealing Social Security taxes. Though he acknowledged that Cox’s proposal has “a lot of wind behind” it, Sen. Dan McCay, R-Riverton, who is also chairman of the Senate Revenue and Taxation Committee, indicated he had misgivings.
“I’ve always believed in a broader base and a lower rate,” McCay said, adding that it’s “better for the economy and better for the taxpayers and is more transparent.”
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“I’ve never been one to believe that we accomplish more by carving (out) or setting aside groups and creating special tax credits,” he said. “That’s why I’m concerned, a little bit, about the push to completely withdraw the tax on Social Security.”
McCay added that he realized it’s “potentially a very politically popular idea. I get it.” But he said “the wealth accumulation for people over the age of 65 over the last 10 years has doubled, (while) wealth accumulation for those under the age of 65 has been cut by a third.”
McCay said Utah households with incomes less than $75,000 already don’t pay taxes on Social Security benefits, while noting the median salary for Utah teachers is $67,000.
“I have a hard time justifying a tax cut that is going to be paid for by teachers, or by other public employees,” he said. “So, while popular — because we would remove our name from the AARP website that says Utah is one of 13 states (that) collects (Social Security) taxes — sometimes it’s important to not only do popular things, but to do the right thing.
McCay said he will “double down” on lowering Utah’s income tax rate and advocating for “a broader tax base,” though he didn’t offer specifics.
SALT LAKE CITY (KUTV) — A wrongful death lawsuit filed in Utah alleges a counterfeit airbag turned a routine crash into a fatal explosion that killed a teenage driver within minutes.
Alexia De La Rosa graduated from Hunter High School in May of 2025. On July 30, 2025, she was involved in a crash.
The lawsuit alleges that when the vehicle’s driver-side airbag deployed, it detonated and sent metal and plastic shrapnel into the cabin.
MORE | Crashes
A large, jagged piece of metal struck Alexia in the chest, and she died minutes later, according to the complaint.
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The lawsuit, filed by Morgan & Morgan in Utah’s Third Judicial District Court, was brought on behalf of Tessie De La Rosa, as personal representative of the estate of her 17-year-old daughter.
The defendants are AutoSavvy Holdings Inc., AutoSavvy Dealerships LLC, and AutoSavvy Management Company LLC.
Morgan & Morgan alleges that the Hyundai Sonata had previously been declared a total loss after a 2023 crash and issued a salvage title. The suit claims AutoSavvy later purchased the vehicle and had it repaired — during which counterfeit, non-compliant, and defective airbag components were allegedly installed — before reselling it to the De La Rosa family.
The complaint further alleges that AutoSavvy knew or should have known the vehicle contained counterfeit and nonfunctional airbag components when it was sold.
“This is the third wrongful death lawsuit we have filed involving alleged counterfeit airbags that we believe turned survivable crashes into fatal incidents,” Morgan & Morgan founder John Morgan said in a statement. “No life should be cut short because a corporation puts profits above safety.”
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Attorney Andrew Parker Felix, who is leading the case, said the firm is committed to uncovering how allegedly illegal airbag inflators enter the stream of commerce and are installed in vehicles sold to consumers.
“To make this perfectly clear, these are not supposed to be in the United States at all,” Felix said. “They are not approved for use in any vehicle that’s being driven in the United States.”
“They don’t have approval from any governmental agency to be installed in vehicles that are driven within the United States and regulated here,” he added.
Morgan & Morgan says it is investigating at least three additional deaths involving other defendants and alleged counterfeit airbags.
KUTV 2News reached out to AutoSavvy multiple times by email and phone. We were told a member of the company’s legal team would be in touch, but as of publication we have not received a response.
Randall will be among several key visitors in attendance for a meeting on March 6
(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) University of Utah President Taylor Randall speaks on campus during an event on Feb. 7.
University of Utah President Taylor Randall is scheduled to meet with President Donald Trump this week.
Randall is expected to be among several attendees at a White House roundtable meeting on Friday to discuss solutions for the rapidly evolving landscape of college athletics with the president, a U. spokesperson said.
The meeting could be postponed, however, due to the war in Iran. As of Monday, “the odds of it happening this week are 50-50 at best,” according to Yahoo Sports.
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If the roundtable happens as scheduled, the guest list includes several current and former notable figures in sports, including NBA Commissioner Adam Silver, golf legend Tiger Woods and former Alabama head coach Nick Saban.
Utah Gov. Spencer Cox confirmed in a social media post on X that he would be in attendance as well.
“Thank you [President Donald Trump] for inviting me to participate, and for your commitment to addressing challenges in college sports,” Cox said on X. “[Taylor Randall] is a great university leader who will work with us on solutions for this critical issue.”
(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) University of Utah President Taylor Randall speaks on campus on Feb. 7.
Earlier this year, Randall was called on by the federal House Committee on Education and Workforce to schedule a briefing to discuss the school’s planned private-equity partnership with Otro Capital, according to a report from Sportico.
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The Utes announced their proposal in December of last year, which is a first-of-its-kind agreement between a university’s athletic department and a private equity company.
Utah’s deal with Otro has yet to be finalized. In a Feb. 10 interview with The Salt Lake Tribune, Randall said the university is “still just working through all of the issues systematically.”
“We want to do this in the right way to set both of us up for future success,” he added.
The move is expected to infuse hundreds of millions of dollars into the U.’s athletic department to help sustain the financial future of the program with rising deficits across the industry.
“I don’t think any of us would prefer to be in this situation right now,” Randall said in a faculty senate meeting in January. “But it just is what we’re facing.”
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SALT LAKE CITY (KUTV) — The 2025-2026 winter season isn’t quite over, but it’s no secret that it’s been a rough one when it comes to snow. Right now, statewide snowpack numbers are hovering around 60% of the median.
But you don’t have to know those numbers to understand what a strange winter it’s been.
“It’s kind of good,” said Carrie Stewart, who lives in Salt Lake City. “I mean, I like it because I like a milder climate. But I realize this summer is going to be hard.”
MORE | Snowpack
“I’m not sad I’m not shoveling,” said Sally Humphreys of Salt Lake City. “But it’s definitely worrying.”
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State water officials are also worried. The clock is ticking to bulk up those snowpack numbers.
“We’re running out of time to get the snowpack that we need,” said Jordan Clayton, supervisor of the Utah Snow Survey. “We have about 40 or so days until our typical snowpack peak.”
There is still some time to make up lost ground, but the odds aren’t great. Clayton estimates a 10% chance of reaching normal by the end of the season.
“Those are terrible odds,” he said.
In fact, the odds of having a record low snowpack are greater, sitting at 20%. It’s a grim reality that has officials looking toward the summer anxiously.
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“I would expect to see watering restrictions outdoors for a lot of places,” said Laura Haskell, Utah’s drought coordinator.
It’s unknown what the next few weeks will bring, but if Haskell had to guess, she doesn’t see state reservoirs filling up much from where they are now.
“In the spring when that runoff hits, we do get a noticeable peak in our reservoir storage,” Haskell said. “The water just starts coming in. But this year, we don’t anticipate getting that.”
Haskell says we have enough reservoir storage to likely make it through the summer, but there are other implications to worry about.
Our autumn season was pretty wet. That led to decent soil moisture levels, which can then lead to higher vegetation growth.
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“If we then have a snowpack that melts out really early, we’ll have a longer than normal summer, if you will, with forage growth that might dry out, and so that’s kind of a bad recipe for promoting fire hazard,” Clayton said.
Utahns have dealt with low snowpack levels in the past. Many Utahns are familiar with their lawn turning brown because of water restrictions.
“We’ll probably just let it go that nice, sandy, golden color that it gets in the summer in a dry climate,” said Dea Ann Kate, who lives in Cottonwood Heights.
As we wait to see what the next few weeks bring, people like Carrie Stewart are just reflecting on an unusual winter.
“It is worrying,” she said. “We need snow. We’ve only shoveled once this season, and that’s very unusual.”
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Water officials are now hoping for something else unusual: climbing out of the snowpack hole that’s been created.
“But there are no times going back where the snowpack totals for the state were close to where they are right now, and we ended up actually at a normal peak,” Clayton said. “So while it’s possible, it’s very unlikely.”