Why Your Water Bills Spike When You Have a Clogged Drain in Utah

09 April 2026

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Why Your Water Bills Spike When You Have a Clogged Drain in Utah

Most people notice a clogged drain when water stands in a tub or a kitchen sink begins to gurgle. In Salt Lake City, that clog often shows up later on a utility statement. The bill climbs, sometimes by 10 to 30 percent, even though the family did not change its routine. This happens because a drain obstruction changes how plumbing fixtures behave, and it changes how people use water inside the home or a building. In Utah’s hard water conditions, the problem stacks up faster. Mineral scale narrows drain paths, roots squeeze clay joints in legacy sewer lines, and grease hangs onto rough cast-iron walls. That mix forces longer fixture run times and repeat cycles on appliances, which moves the meter.

Salt Lake City sits at high elevation. Water boils sooner, pressure swings harder across fixtures, and gases inside a vent stack behave a bit differently than they do at sea level. Pair that with older housing in The Avenues, Sugar House, and Liberty Wells, where many sewer laterals were cast iron or clay before PVC became common. Factor in mature trees near the curb and parkstrips in Capitol Hill and Federal Heights. The result is a citywide pattern: more root intrusion, more mineral scale buildup, and more homes that see a spike in water use when a clog slows a drain. Just Right Plumbing sees this pattern across 84101, 84102, 84103, 84105, 84106, 84108, 84109, and 84111 every week.
How a Drain Clog Pushes the Meter in Salt Lake City
A drain clog does not add gallons by itself. The city meter records supply water, not wastewater. The spike comes from behavior changes and mechanical reactions up the line from the blockage.

First, people run more water to force a slow drain. A kitchen sink with a partial grease clog needs a longer faucet run to move soap and food particles past the P-trap. That might add 30 to 80 gallons per day in a busy kitchen. A bathroom tub that drains slowly in a Yalecrest bungalow pushes users to let the shower run longer to keep the basin clear. That is one to three extra minutes of flow at 2 gallons per minute. Over a month, the difference stands out.

Second, appliances re-run. A dishwasher that vents poorly into a slow kitchen drain may stall mid-cycle when the standpipe or branch arm cannot keep up. The user resets the cycle once the sink drains. The same happens with front-load washers in Liberty Wells or Rose Park when a utility tub or floor drain cannot accept the discharge. The machine errors out, the homeowner runs a second cycle, and the meter records another 10 to 20 gallons.

Third, toilets double-flush. A main line blockage causes gurgling toilets, air burping through the bowl, and weak siphon performance. Users try another flush. Many older toilets in Federal Heights and The Avenues use 3.5 gallons per flush. Two cycles add up. Even modern 1.28 gpf models waste water when they fight a partially blocked sewer pipe.

Fourth, make-up water adds on. If a trap seal siphons because a vent stack is blocked, fixtures refill and repeat. A sump pump with a tied-in utility tub in a Millcreek basement may run more often if drainage is slow, leading users to flush more water down floor drains to test flow. That is not waste in the sewer sense, but it is billable at the meter.

Finally, leak-by events show up under stress. Surges from a partial obstruction can disturb mineral flakes and debris, lodging them in fill valves and faucet cartridges. A toilet fill valve can stick open slightly after a sewage backup, leading to a constant trickle. At 0.2 gallons per minute, that adds roughly 288 gallons per day. Owners in 84105 and 84106 often report that the bill jumped right after they noticed slow drains and gurgles.
Utah’s Hard Water Makes Slow Drains More Likely
Salt Lake City’s supply is mineral-rich. Calcium and magnesium coat inside lines, not just on faucets. Inside a P-trap and downstream branch arms, scale grabs lint, hair, and grease. In older homes near Liberty Park and Sugar House Park, cast-iron pipe walls already have a rough texture. Scale plus rust narrows the path, which slows laminar flow and triggers early stagnation. This is why hydro-jetting works so well here compared to cable-only methods. A hydro-jetter nozzle scours the full circumference of the pipe, not just a channel. The pipe descaling effect matters in hard water cities.

Mineral scale also forms stalactite-like ridges at transition points and fittings. A 90-degree elbow under a kitchen sink or a tee near a garbage disposal becomes a snag. This creates slow drains that appear intermittent. Flows on weekends feel worse because more solids pass. Users compensate with more water. The bill reflects that change.

Bio-safe treatments help maintain clear walls after cleaning. Enzymatic cleaners such as Bio-Clean digest organic matter left on pipe surfaces. In Salt Lake City conditions, a monthly dose reduces sticky film that traps calcium fines. This does not replace proper drain cleaning. It sustains it, delaying the next service call and muting the bill creep that follows early-stage clogs.
Why Root Intrusion in Salt Lake’s Older Sewer Laterals Adds Gallons
Sugar House, The Avenues, and Capitol Hill share one pattern: mature trees over old clay or cast-iron sewer laterals. Joints in clay pipe were not watertight by modern standards. Small leaks feed roots. Over time, a hairline root mat becomes a net that catches wipes, paper, and grease. The homeowner sees slow drains and toilet gurgling. To push waste out, users run the tub or shower, flush more than once, and keep the kitchen tap open longer after using the InSinkErator disposal. All of this adds supply water to compensate for a downstream restriction.

Hydraulically, a root mass reduces the effective diameter. Under peak loads, flows back up toward the stack, which triggers vent interaction. Gurgles pull water from traps, letting foul sewage odors escape. People then run water to refill traps. That habit raises the bill even if the clog remains. In some homes near the Utah State Capitol or Temple Square, a main line blockage combines with an older vent stack that is partially blocked by scale. Negative pressure increases. Every flush is weaker, so every flush becomes two.

Root intrusion management in Salt Lake City requires the right sequence. A video camera pipe inspection with a Ridgid head shows the root node, joint spacing, belly, or offset. A rooter service with a Spartan Tool or a General Wire Spring cable can open a path. Hydro-jetting then strips fiber down to the wall and washes debris to the city main. If joints are open or the lateral is cracked, trenchless sewer repair with a Perma-Liner liner seals the joint and starves roots. That prevents the repeat cycle of slow drains and the water waste that follows.
How Grease Clogs Drive Repeats in Kitchens from 84101 to 84111
Restaurants near Vivint Arena and small kitchens in Downtown condos share a similar trap. Grease cools and sticks before it reaches the main. Even at home, pan rinses and dishwater carry fats that harden in the branch arm. Residents run the faucet longer to push residue past the trap arm into the stack. With a partial obstruction, that longer run is a reflex. It might be an extra 30 seconds per sink use. Multiply that by 40 or more sink uses per day in a family of four. That is about 40 to 60 extra gallons. Over a month, this can explain a $10 to $25 increase on a municipal bill, depending on tiered rates.

Hydro-jetting with the correct hydro-jetter nozzle and PSI clears this without damaging a fragile cast-iron wall. A technician sets pressure based on pipe material and diameter. In older Yalecrest bungalows, 2-inch kitchen lines might only tolerate a lower pressure with careful nozzle selection to avoid forcing water into weak joints. After the line is clean, enzymes keep residue from bonding. Pipe descaling on the kitchen branch helps in homes that show repeated grease clogs. The homeowner then sees normal sink run times return, and the bill trend stabilizes.
The Role of Venting, Trap Seals, and Why Gurgles Mean Gallons
The vent stack equalizes pressure. If a vent is blocked by a bird nest near Federal Heights or mineral flakes near Rose Park, fixtures siphon. Trap seals break and refill. That refill is supply water. A toilet with a weak vent may need extra flushes to clear solids. A kitchen sink might burp air and lose its trap seal, then refill slowly while the faucet still runs. Each event adds a few cups or a quart. Over weeks, this becomes cubic feet.

In Salt Lake City’s elevation, pressure changes faster within vertical stacks. The margin for venting errors shrinks. Minor blockages create noticeable gurgling toilets and slow drains. Homeowners often run more water to avoid smells. The correct fix is Drain Cleaning plus a video camera pipe inspection to confirm the vent tie-ins are clear. A roof inspection and a sweep can restore airflow. Restored venting usually cuts excessive flush cycles within a day.
Main Sewer Line Dynamics in SLC’s Mixed Infrastructure
Salt Lake City utilities connect a city main to each property via a sewer lateral. Many laterals near The Avenues and Capitol Hill are decades old. Clay segments shift with freeze-thaw and soil movement along the Wasatch Front. A belly in the line holds standing water. That standing water collects solids and encourages grease to separate and stick. During storms, a catch basin in an alley or a combined flow near older blocks can add external load, even if the city system is separate. Owners then see slow drains even in dry weather because the lateral always holds a partial obstruction.

The fix starts at the cleanout. A technician runs a drain auger, also called a plumbing snake, to confirm a path and retrieve wipes or foreign objects. A Ridgid camera follows to identify fractures or offsets. If the lateral is intact but scaled, hydro-jetting clears the wall and restores full diameter. If the lateral is compromised, trenchless sewer repair with a Perma-Liner inversion liner restores structure without trenching up a driveway in Sugar House or a yard in Liberty Wells. After the lateral flows well, household behavior returns to normal and metered use drops back to baseline.
Hidden Bill Drivers: Fill Valves, Cartridges, and Pressure Surges
Clogs change pressure. When a branch backs up and then flushes suddenly, water hammer and turbulence can nudge valves out of their stable range. Toilet fill valves often stick after a backup. Faucets with ceramic cartridges in Viega-connected lines can develop a drip that the homeowner misses. These are small, but they run all day.

A single toilet with a hairline leak can waste 1,000 to 3,000 gallons per month. A slow drip at a tub spout may add another 150 to 300 gallons. In practice, many Salt Lake owners first notice a spike on the bill and only later recall that the toilet ran off and on after a sewage backup. The chain is simple. Drain clog, gurgle, backup, pressure surge, valve disturbance, and then leak-by. A thorough clogged drain repair includes dye tests on toilets and checks on cartridge valves. That reduces bill creep and prevents return visits.
Apartment, ADU, and Commercial Scenarios Seen Across 84102 and 84103
In multifamily buildings near the University of Utah and along South Temple, one slow vertical stack produces dozens of small behavioral changes that add up to real gallons. Tenants let showers run longer to keep water below ankle level in bathroom tubs. Janitors flush floor drains in utility rooms to chase odors that come from venting issues or dry traps. Commercial kitchens near Temple Square run sinks hot to break down fats when a grease trap is overdue for service. All of that pushes the meter.

A building with a main line blockage can consume thousands of extra gallons in a week. Managers in Capitol Hill often see that spike after holiday events. The correction requires coordinated service. Hydro-jetting on the affected riser, catch basin cleaning, and a video camera pipe inspection at key junctions solve the obstruction. A rooter service pass with a Spartan Tool cable may be used first to create flow, followed by full hydro-jetting to the main. Once normal drainage returns, tenant behavior normalizes and metered consumption drops.
Why Drain Issues in West Valley City, Murray, and Bountiful Affect Salt Lake Owners Too
Many families in Salt Lake City have work or family ties across the valley. A clogged drain in a Murray rental or a Bountiful office still leads to increased water use at that property. Owners who compare bills across properties often notice that drain issues correlate with higher metered use wherever the slow drain exists. The same hard water, root intrusion, and legacy infrastructure appear across West Valley City, Holladay, Sandy, Draper, South Jordan, and Millcreek. The patterns and fixes match what technicians see in the core city.
Technical Signals That Predict a Bill Spike
Field data show a link between specific drain symptoms and later water-use increases. Each symptom prompts owners or occupants to run more water.
Slow drains in kitchen sinks near 84111 cause longer faucet runs and repeat garbage disposal cycles. Gurgling toilets in Sugar House lead to double flushes and trap refill cycles. Foul sewage odors in The Avenues prompt occupants to run water into floor drains and utility tubs to restore trap seals. Standing water in bathroom tubs in Liberty Wells delays shower shutoff and adds minutes of hot water use. Overflowing sinks in Capitol Hill kitchens trigger extended rinses to avoid residue and odors. How Professional Drain Cleaning Reduces Water Waste in SLC Homes
Drain Cleaning is not only a comfort fix. In a city with tiered water rates, it is a bill control measure. A complete job addresses cause, not just symptom. In Salt Lake City, this means starting at the cleanout with a camera-ready plan.

A technician sets a Ridgid video camera at the main cleanout to observe real-time flow. If the lens shows mineral scale buildup on the sewer pipe wall, they proceed with pipe descaling using hydro-jetting at a controlled PSI and flow. In many Sugar House homes, a 3 to 4 gpm jet at 2,000 to 3,000 PSI with a rotational hydro-jetter nozzle provides wall-to-wall cleaning without lifting joints. For heavy grease clogs near kitchen lines, a forward-penetrating nozzle clears the path ahead, followed by a spinner to scour the circumference.

If roots appear near the curb line, the technician may start with a drain auger. A Spartan Tool sectional machine or a General Wire Spring drum machine cuts fibrous roots and opens the way. After that, hydro-jetting strips residual hair and sap to the lateral’s full diameter. If the sewer lateral shows fractures or offsets, trenchless sewer repair with a Perma-Liner CIPP solution locks out further root intrusion. That single structural fix prevents the pattern of slow drains and extra water running that burns money month after month.

On fixture branches, attention to the P-trap and vent connections matters. A blocked vent stack can make even a clear drain behave like a clogged one. Clearing the vent restores trap seals and cuts down on odor-flush habits. After clearing, technicians often dose Bio-Clean to condition organic films. They may also suggest a maintenance schedule, such as an annual hydro-jetting pass for restaurants near Downtown and a camera check every two years for homes under mature elms in Federal Heights.
Garbage Disposals, InSinkErator Behavior, and Water Use
Garbage disposals depend on volume flow. Many homeowners run the faucet longer than needed to help an older InSinkErator grind and move waste through a scaled line. With a partial blockage, they keep the faucet open while the motor runs, then for another minute after. This habit spikes consumption. A cleaned kitchen branch line and a smooth trap arm cut that habit immediately. Technicians also check for misaligned baffles or sagging sections near the cabinet floor. A simple bracket correction restores slope and reduces the need for excess water during disposal use.
Septic Tanks, Sump Pumps, and Edge Cases Along the Wasatch Front
Most Salt Lake City addresses tie into municipal sewers, but some properties on the edges near Holladay or Draper use septic tanks. A clogged outlet baffle or a flooded leach field causes slow drains inside the home. Owners often run extra water to test flow or mask odors. That adds gallons to the well supply or to a metered connection where available. For these cases, a video camera pipe inspection from the home to the tank and out to the distribution box confirms the cause. Pumping the tank, jetting the outlet line, and restoring venting returns normal behavior and steadies water use.

Basements with sump pumps and connected utility tubs add another wrinkle. During storms, a floor drain that ties into a slow lateral backs up. Owners run hoses or fill-and-dump buckets to test. That is supply water, and it adds up. Clearing the downstream sewer pipe with hydro-jetting and verifying the check valve on the sump discharge stops repeat tests and the gallons they waste.
Why DIY Snake Passes Often Fail in 84105 and 84106
Hardware store snakes open a channel through soft clogs. In Salt Lake City’s mineral conditions, that small hole closes fast. Users then repeat the snake pass and run more water to test, growing the bill but not solving the cause. The DIY auger also cannot shape the wall or flush debris to the main. A professional pass with a camera, Spartan Tool or General Wire Spring machine, correct hydro-jetter nozzle, and controlled technique restores the pipe to near-original diameter. The result is not just a clear drain. It is a clear drain that does not ask for extra water to function.
City Metering, Rate Tiers, and How a Clog Moves You Up a Bracket
Salt Lake City water rates use tiered pricing. A slow drain that causes a family to run an extra 60 to 100 gallons per day can push monthly use past a threshold. That shift costs more per gallon, not just more gallons. Homes in 84103 and 84108 with irrigation demands in summer feel this most. Add two weeks of slow drains in July, and the total can jump into a higher bracket. Fixing the clog returns the household to its typical tier.

Commercial accounts near Vivint Arena and Temple Square are also sensitive to usage tiers and sewer charges linked to water consumption. Extended rinses, repeat dishwasher cycles, and bathroom fixture overuse caused by venting or drain issues can change monthly charges by hundreds of dollars. Drain Cleaning and rooter service reduce that waste directly.
Practical Clues on the Utility Bill
A water bill often shows more than the total. It shows usage by day or by cycle length. Owners in 84101, 84111, and 84102 can spot patterns that point to drain-related waste.
Usage rises on weekends when more cooking and showers occur. That hints at a kitchen or bathroom branch restriction. Daily lows increase, which points to a small constant leak after a backup disturbed a toilet fill valve. Short, sharp spikes tie to repeat appliance cycles in homes with slow kitchen sink drains and dishwashers that re-run. Monthly use crosses a tier while seasonal patterns, like irrigation, do not explain it. This suggests added flushes and faucet runs due to slow drains. The spike aligns with reports of gurgling toilets, foul sewage odors, or a recent sewage backup. Neighborhood-Specific Patterns and Tools
In The Avenues, narrow streets and mature trees complicate access. Cleanouts may be buried or hidden. Video camera pipe inspection with a Ridgid locator helps find the line and mark root nodes without trenching. Spartan Tool sectional machines carry up steep access better than large drums.

Sugar House and Yalecrest homes often have cast-iron laterals with scale. Pipe descaling plus hydro-jetting produces good, durable results. A follow-up Bio-Clean program helps hold gains between services.

Federal Heights and Capitol Hill slopes create velocity changes. Bellies in laterals form where fill settled over time. A Perma-Liner trenchless sewer repair can bridge a belly within limits or strengthen a sagging clogged drain Salt Lake City https://s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/just-right-plumbing-heating-cooling/clogged-drain-service/why-multiple-slow-drains-in-salt-lake-city-signal-a-serious-main-line-issue.html segment before it collapses. That stabilizes flows and eliminates slow-drain habits.

Rose Park and Liberty Wells homes tend to show grease clogs and vent issues in older kitchens. A combined approach works well: rooter service to open a path, hydro-jetting to clean the wall, and a quick roof vent check to restore air movement. Residents report near-immediate relief from gurgling toilets after proper vent clearing.

Downtown condos near 84111 with shared stacks benefit from scheduled hydro-jetting during low-occupancy hours. General Wire Spring drum machines run quietly and fit service elevators. Crews stage near Vivint Arena or Temple Square and complete rooter passes before peak traffic.
How Just Right Plumbing Diagnoses and Fixes the True Cause
A correct repair in Salt Lake City is data-driven. The team begins with a site history. Notes include the home’s age, neighborhood soil, tree density, and pipe material guesses based on street records. A scan with a Ridgid camera confirms these details. The technician logs the depth, slope, and condition of the sewer pipe, checks branch ties at the utility tub and kitchen sink, and tests vents at the roof. If a main line blockage is present, they create flow with a drain auger, then hydro-jet to restore full diameter.

If mineral scale buildup is heavy, they apply pipe descaling at controlled speeds. For grease clogs, they adjust temperature and flow to emulsify and carry fats to the main. If the camera shows cracked joints or offsets, trenchless sewer repair with Perma-Liner is planned. Crews use Spartan Tool and General Wire Spring machines for access, then switch to jetting for finish quality. After structural fixes, fixtures and cartridges get checked. Technicians test toilet fill valves, run dye tablets, and inspect Viega-connected lines for leaks or drips induced by prior backups.

Where odors linger, they test the vent stack and restore trap seals. Floor drains, catch basins, and cleanouts are mapped and labeled for future use. For properties with Septic Tanks, the crew checks the outlet baffle and the distribution box. For basements with Sump Pumps, they confirm the check valve and discharge.

Every step aims at one outcome: normal flows so residents stop compensating with extra water. That is how bills return to baseline and stay there.
How to Prevent Drain-Driven Water Waste in Salt Lake City Homes
Prevention keeps gallons off the meter. In Utah’s mineral-rich environment, small habits and scheduled maintenance go a long way. Homeowners near Liberty Park should avoid pouring fats into kitchen sinks. Use strainers on bathroom tubs to catch hair, which binds with calcium. Rinse disposals with short, high-flow bursts rather than long trickles. Treat lines with Bio-Clean monthly to reduce organic film. In older homes in Capitol Hill and The Avenues, schedule a video camera pipe inspection every two years to check for root intrusion and scale. If a home has a clay or cast-iron sewer lateral, consider a proactive hydro-jetting service before the holidays to avoid repeat dishwasher cycles and overflow events when guests increase loads.

For repeated slow drains, weigh the cost of frequent rooter passes against a single trenchless sewer repair. A Perma-Liner liner in a problematic lateral often costs less over five years than repeated service calls and higher water bills, especially in properties with mature maples or elms along the parkstrip.
What a Property Manager Should Watch Across Multiple Addresses
Managers with units in 84101, 84105, and 84111 can cut water waste by linking maintenance logs to utility data. Note every report of gurgling toilets, slow drains, or foul sewage odors. Check the bill the next cycle. If usage rose, accelerate Drain Cleaning and rooter service for that stack or unit. After the service, re-check the bill trend. In many Salt Lake City buildings, a single hydro-jetting visit to a key riser brings usage back down within days.

In commercial spaces near Vivint Arena or the University of Utah, coordinate kitchen line hydro-jetting with grease trap service. Video check the vent stack after roof work or storms that may have introduced debris. Confirm that bathroom P-traps have water after long holiday closures. These steps cut down on odor-flush habits that waste water in the first week back.
A Note on Safety and Professional Standards
Work at height on vent stacks and work in sewers both carry risk. Just Right Plumbing deploys NATE-Certified Technicians who are Licensed, Bonded, and Insured. Crews use Ridgid cameras and locators, Spartan Tool and General Wire Spring machines, and calibrated hydro-jetters. Jobs follow confined space and ladder safety procedures. The company is BBB Accredited and Google Guaranteed. Clients in Sugar House, The Avenues, Capitol Hill, Liberty Wells, Yalecrest, Federal Heights, Rose Park, and Millcreek receive Upfront Flat-Rate Pricing, with a 100% Satisfaction Guarantee on the service performed.
Why Prompt Clog Relief Pays Back on the Next Bill
If a slow drain lasts for three weeks, a family of four can use 1,200 to 2,500 extra gallons. Add a toilet fill valve leak induced by a backup, and the number climbs fast. A single service visit that clears the obstruction and addresses root causes often pays for itself within a cycle or two of normal billing. In Salt Lake City’s hard water context, combining hydro-jetting, pipe descaling where needed, and video camera confirmation sets a home or building up for stable, low-friction drainage.
Service Scope Across the Wasatch Front
Just Right Plumbing provides Drain Cleaning, Rooter Service, Hydro-jetting, Pipe Descaling, Video Camera Pipe Inspection, Clogged Drain Repair, Sewer Line Repair, and Trenchless Sewer Repair in Salt Lake City, UT and nearby areas. Teams stage near Sugar House Park, Liberty Park, Utah State Capitol, and Hogle Zoo to reach 84101, 84102, 84103, 84105, 84106, 84108, 84109, and 84111 fast. Neighboring areas include West Valley City, Murray, Holladay, Sandy, Draper, Bountiful, South Jordan, and Millcreek. Technicians handle Kitchen Sinks, Garbage Disposals, Bathroom Tubs, Utility Tubs, Floor Drains, and Main Sewer Lines. They also diagnose Septic Tanks and integrate work with Sump Pumps when needed. Every truck carries Bio-Clean, InSinkErator parts, Viega fittings, and the right hydro-jetter nozzle for the pipe in play.
Clear next steps for Salt Lake City owners
If a bill rose and a drain gurgles, the link is real. For clogged drain service Salt Lake City residents can count on, contact Just Right Plumbing for a video camera inspection and hydro-jetting plan. Licensed, Bonded, and Insured. NATE-Certified Technicians. 24/7 Emergency Response. Upfront Flat-Rate Pricing. BBB Accredited and Google Guaranteed. Book the visit, stop the extra faucet runs and repeat flushes, and get the next bill trending back down.

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<h2 itemprop="name">Just Right Plumbing, Heating & Cooling</h2>

<strong>Website:</strong> https://justrightair.com https://justrightair.com


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<strong>Phone:</strong> +1 801-302-1154 tel:+18013021154

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<div class="locations">
<h3>Our Locations</h3>

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<strong>Main Office:</strong><br>
<span itemprop="streetAddress">2990 S 460 W</span>,<br>
<span itemprop="addressLocality">Salt Lake City</span>,
<span itemprop="addressRegion">UT</span>
<span itemprop="postalCode">84115</span>
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<address>
<strong>Downtown SLC Satellite:</strong><br>
231 E 400 S, Unit 104B, Salt Lake City, UT 84111
</address>

<address>
<strong>Layton Branch:</strong><br>
3146 N Fairfield Rd, Layton, UT 84041
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<h3>Hours of Operation</h3>
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<li>Monday - Friday: 7:30am – 6:00pm</li>
<li>Saturday: 8:00am – 4:00pm</li>
<li><strong>Phone Hours: 24/7</strong></li>
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<strong>Utah Licenses:</strong> 12304429-5501 / 12343294-0151 / 14523170-0151

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