Be Informed
Be Ready Utah
Being informed can save your life.
An investment in knowledge pays the best interest.
Start Here
Do This First
Being informed takes deliberate action before a disaster strikes. Here's where to start:
Knowledge is power. The time to learn is before an emergency occurs. Families who understand the hazards they face, know the protective actions, and have registered for warning systems are dramatically better positioned to survive and recover.
Know Your Area
Utah Hazards
Utah's varying climate and terrain create a wide range of hazards. Every Utahn should know which hazards are present in their area, both natural and human-caused.
Winter Storms
Utah receives storms with significant wind, cold temperatures, and snowfall that can cause power outages and transportation disruptions.
High Winds & Tornadoes
Utah averages two tornadoes per year. An F2 tornado struck downtown Salt Lake City in 1999, killing one person and causing over $170 million in damages.
Lightning Strikes
Utah sees approximately 200,000 cloud-to-ground lightning flashes each year, making it the leading weather-related cause of death in the state.
Wildland Fires
70% of wildfires in Utah are human-caused, costing tens of millions of dollars annually. Dry summers increase risk significantly.
Structure Fires
Most structure fires can be prevented with basic fire safety practices and reducing hazards in your own home.
Floods
The most common and most expensive natural disaster in Utah. Homes outside designated flood plains are also at risk. Flooding can strike anywhere.
Earthquakes
About 1,500 earthquakes occur in Utah each year. The largest expected magnitude in Utah is 7.0–7.5, occurring roughly every 150 years along the Wasatch Front.
Thunderstorms
Can involve multiple simultaneous hazards: wind, heavy rain, lightning, hail, and flash flooding, often with little warning.
Landslides & Mud Flows
Common in areas that previously experienced wildfire. Over-saturated slopes can move quickly and with little warning.
Hazardous Materials
Roads, rails, and skies in Utah transport hazardous materials daily. Spills and accidents can require evacuation or shelter-in-place.
Biological Contamination
Contamination can spread through air, water, or direct contact, whether intentional or not. Common example: boil water notices.
Other Threats
Infrastructure failures, dam failures, cyber threats, and pandemic events are all part of Utah's risk landscape.
Explore Utah's disaster history (opens in new tab) to understand past events in your region.
What Happens When
Hazard Impacts
Hazards themselves are only part of the picture. What you're really preparing for are the downstream impacts: the disruptions to everyday life that follow. Think through each one and plan accordingly.
When Disaster Strikes
Protective Actions
Protective actions are the immediate steps you take to protect yourself and others from the initial impact of a hazardous event. Knowing your hazards and your impacts doesn't help if you don't know what to do when they occur.
If you don't know how to survive the initial disaster, the rest of your planning doesn't matter. Visit the Protective Actions page (opens in new tab) to learn the immediate actions for each type of hazardous incident that could affect your area.
Stay Connected
Reliable Warning Systems
Knowing how you will receive emergency information is as important as knowing what hazards you face. Warning systems vary by jurisdiction. Contact your local Emergency Manager to find out what's available in your area.
The key question: How will you receive emergency instructions and public information when disaster strikes? Where are the shelters? Where can you get food and water? Can you stop boiling your water? Know the answers before you need them.
Sign up for earthquake alerts: Text UtahQuake to 43362. Find your local Emergency Manager at dem.utah.gov (opens in new tab).
Build Real Skills
Practice Makes Prepared
Knowing information intellectually is very different from knowing how to act under stress. Regular practice turns plans into habits and habits into survival.
Take it one piece at a time. It's never too late to prepare. Start now.
Learn More
Downloads & Key Links
What's Next?
Being informed is step three. Keep building your preparedness.