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Window Replacement

Window Replacement Cost in Utah 2026

May 18, 2026·9 min read
Window Replacement Cost in Utah 2026

Utah window replacements run 2-7% above national — Salt Lake growth + Park City premium.

The 2026 Utah window-replacement baseline

For a typical 2,000 sqft single-family home with 12–18 windows replaced (mid-tier vinyl double-hung, energy-rated Low-E double-pane), expect a whole-project total of $6.5K–$25.6K in Utah. Per-window installed cost varies by metro (full pricing below). Premium upgrades — triple-pane glass, fiberglass frames, or impact-rated hurricane glass where applicable — add 35–55% on top of the base spec.

For your specific project, run our Utah window replacement cost calculator with your window count and home size.

What drives Utah pricing

  • Cold-climate IECC zone. Utah Climate Zone 5 requires U-factor ≤0.30. Triple-pane common at higher elevations.
  • Inversion + UV. Salt Lake Valley inversion-layer winter pollution + 4,200 ft UV demand premium Low-E + good weatherstripping.
  • Park City / resort premium. Park City, Deer Valley, Sundance resort areas run 30-50% above SLC baseline.

Utah window replacement pricing by metro (2026)

Typical installed cost for a single mid-tier vinyl double-hung replacement window (35–39" wide × 49–55" tall). Multiply by your home's window count for a project estimate, then add 10–15% contingency for unexpected condition.

  • Salt Lake City: $580–$1000 per window installed.
  • Provo: $560–$960 per window installed.
  • Ogden: $540–$920 per window installed.
  • Park City (resort): $820–$1420 per window installed.

Pricing reflects mid-tier vinyl double-pane Low-E. Triple-pane, fiberglass-frame, or impact-rated glass run 35–55% higher. Full-frame replacement on stucco or brick exteriors adds $150–$450 per opening for masonry/stucco patching.

Permits and inspections

Most Utah jurisdictions require permits when you're modifying the rough opening, replacing more than 2–3 windows in a single project, or installing impact-rated windows in coastal counties. Like-for-like single window replacements often don't require a permit. Expect 1–3 inspections (rough framing if openings change, energy/insulation, final).

Permit cost typically runs $80–$400 in Utah depending on jurisdiction. Larger projects (10+ windows) sometimes require an energy-code REScheck compliance form — your contractor should handle this.

Best time of year to replace

Utah contractors typically run leanest from October through February. Booking in the off-season can save 8–18% compared to peak summer pricing, and permitting moves faster too. Reserve your install slot 4–8 weeks ahead of when you want work to start — quality installers book out further during peak.

The 3 highest-leverage moves

  1. Get 3 written, line-item bids. Not lump-sum quotes. Specify the exact window brand, series, glass package, and per-opening labor rate. Single-bidder pricing is unreliable; 3-bid pricing is your leverage.
  2. Verify NFRC label compliance. Every window must have an NFRC label with U-factor and SHGC printed on it. If your contractor's bid doesn't specify NFRC values, they're either missing it or using a non-rated product — both are reasons to walk.
  3. Don't skip on installation. A premium window installed wrong leaks more than a budget window installed right. Look for installers who use butyl flashing tape on the rough opening (not just caulk), and who provide a labor warranty separate from the manufacturer warranty.

Related Utah cost guidance

Bottom line

Whole-home window replacement in Utah costs $6.5K–$25.6K depending on home size, window count, and metro. Per-window installed cost runs $540–$1420 — pick your closest metro from the table above for your starting point. Get 3 line-item bids, verify NFRC compliance, and time your install for the October-February off-season for the best pricing. Run our Utah window calculator for a project-specific number based on your home's window count.

More cost guides for Utah

Planning multiple projects? Every other 2026 Utah cost guide carries the same state-specific labor and pricing detail.

Cost by state for this project

State-adjusted ranges with local labor and material multipliers.

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