Utah

How Much Does an ER Visit Cost in Utah?

A typical mid-complexity ER visit in Utah is billed around $2,800, with most visits ranging from $850 to $6,600 before insurance adjustments. Below: what affects the cost, what to check, and what to ask before you pay.

Average ER costs in Utah

Typical charged amounts before insurance adjustments. Your final bill depends on your plan, the hospital, and the complexity of the visit.

Low-acuity visit

$850

Minor issue, minimal testing (Level 1–2)

Typical visit

$2,800

Mid-complexity, some labs and imaging (Level 3–4)

High-acuity visit

$6,600

Complex case, multiple scans, observation (Level 5)

Note on variation: Salt Lake City systems — Intermountain Health and University of Utah Health — dominate state pricing and tend to be more transparent than the national average.

Why ER bills are high in Utah

Hospital facility fee

In Utah, the facility fee — what the hospital charges just for using the ER room — is often the single largest line on the bill, frequently $1,500–$3,500+.

Multiple billing parties

The hospital, the ER physician group, and any radiologist who reads your scans typically bill separately, so one visit can produce two or three bills.

Insurance network mismatches

Even at an in-network hospital in Utah, the ER physician group may be out-of-network. Federal No Surprises Act rules cover most of these situations, but errors still happen.

Regional pricing variation

Utah has standard federal No Surprises Act protections; Intermountain Health publishes detailed financial-assistance criteria.

Common charges on a Utah ER bill

Labs

Metabolic panels, CBCs, troponins — each billed individually, often at several times outpatient prices.

Imaging

X-rays, CT scans, and ultrasounds. Hospital ER imaging in major metros tends to run high.

Supplies

IV starts, splints, "ER kits." Vague supply lines are some of the most reviewable charges.

Monitoring

Hourly observation, telemetry, and pulse-ox charges that can repeat across a multi-hour visit.

Physician fees

The ER doctor bills separately from the hospital, and may be in or out of network independently.

What to check on your bill

  • Duplicate charges — the same CPT code billed more than once on the same date.
  • Vague "misc supplies" or "ER kit" lines with no clear breakdown.
  • Facility fees coded at Level 4 or 5 for short, simple visits.
  • Repeated monitoring or observation charges that pile up beyond what the visit length supports.
  • Out-of-network physician charges at an in-network hospital, which may be protected.

Example: a typical Salt Lake City ER visit

A realistic mid-complexity visit at a Utah hospital — the kind of bill most patients receive for chest pain, abdominal pain, or a suspected fracture.

DescriptionAmount
ER facility fee (Level 4)$1,540
Comprehensive metabolic panel + CBC$448
Chest X-ray, 2 views$504
IV start + supplies$168
Emergency physician services$140
Total billed$2,800

Illustrative only. Actual bills vary by hospital, insurance plan, and visit complexity.

Upload your Utah ER bill to see what's worth reviewing

We highlight duplicates, vague items, and unusually high lines so you know exactly what to ask before you pay.

FAQ

How much is an ER visit in Utah?
Most ER visits in Utah are charged between $850 and $6,600, with a typical mid-complexity visit running around $2,800. The amount you actually owe depends on your insurance plan, deductible, and whether the providers were in-network.
Does insurance cover ER visits in Utah?
Yes — federal law requires most insurance plans to cover emergency services without prior authorization, regardless of network status. Your share depends on your plan's deductible, copay, and coinsurance. The federal No Surprises Act protects you from most out-of-network balance billing for emergency care.
Why is my Utah ER bill so high?
Salt Lake City systems — Intermountain Health and University of Utah Health — dominate state pricing and tend to be more transparent than the national average. Beyond geography, ER bills include a separate facility fee, a separate physician charge, and individual lines for every test, image, and supply — each billed at the highest rate by default.
Can I dispute charges on a Utah ER bill?
Yes. You can request a fully itemized bill, ask the hospital to verify charges, dispute duplicates or unclear items, request a coding review of the facility fee, and apply for financial assistance. Utah has standard federal No Surprises Act protections; Intermountain Health publishes detailed financial-assistance criteria.