Park City is a mountain resort town 30 miles east of Salt Lake City, and it is not a typical student housing market. The University of Utah has a Park City satellite campus, and a handful of students in ski and outdoor recreation programs end up here, but the rental market is driven by resort industry workers and wealthy second-home owners — not students. Rents are among the highest in Utah, and most units are designed for the resort worker and vacation market rather than the academic calendar. Students who choose Park City are typically here for a specific program or experience, not standard off-campus housing.
Park City's most walkable area and the historic core. Closest to the ski resorts and Main Street. Almost entirely resort-worker and vacation market. Expensive by Utah standards.
Slightly more affordable than Old Town, with some apartment complexes targeting resort workers. The most realistic option for students on a budget in Park City — which is still not cheap.
Here's what you need to know about getting around Park City.
Park City Transit operates free bus service throughout Park City and to the ski resorts, which makes car-free living within the city more viable than most Utah towns. However, connecting to Salt Lake City requires a car or the infrequent UTA route 35 bus.
Old Town and the immediate resort area are walkable. The free bus system covers most of the city. Outside those zones, a car is necessary. Park City is unusually pedestrian-friendly by Utah standards, if expensive.
Parking in Old Town is limited during ski season. Prospector and residential areas have more available parking. Ski resort parking has its own complex system.
Common questions from students searching for housing.
Park City is one of the most expensive rental markets in Utah — shared units typically run $1,000-$1,800/mo per person, significantly higher than Salt Lake or Provo. It is not a typical student market and the prices reflect that.