Skating Rinks in Utah
15 rinks across 12 cities
Utah is home to 15 skating rinks spread across 12 cities and towns, offering both roller skating and ice skating options along the Wasatch Front and into the southern part of the state. Orem leads the directory with three rinks, followed by Sandy with two, while communities such as Salt Lake City, Ogden, Layton, Logan, Millcreek, and Cedar City each contribute a venue of their own. The most-reviewed location in the state is Classic Fun Center in Sandy, which holds a 4.4-star rating from 4,294 visitors. Whether you are looking for a quad-skate session in Utah Valley or sharpening figure skates closer to downtown Salt Lake City, the directory covers a meaningful slice of the state's active rinks.
Browse by City
Cedar Skate and Fun Center
Cedar City, Utah
Open
Classic Fun Center
Layton, Utah
Cache Valley Fun Park - Ice and Roller Skating Rinks in Logan UT
Logan, Utah
Open
Millcreek Common
Millcreek, Utah
Open
Neptune skating
Ogden, Utah
Open
Classic Skating & Fun Center
Orem, Utah
Orem Classic Fun Center
Orem, Utah
Open
The Rush Funplex
Orem, Utah
Temporarily Closed
Gallivan center Roller Rink
Salt Lake City, Utah
Open
Classic Fun Center
Sandy, Utah
Open
Classic Fun Center in Sandy
Sandy, Utah
Open
Classic Skating (formerly The RinQ)
St. George, Utah
Open
The Rush Funplex
Syracuse, Utah
Open
The Bedrock Skate & Play
Vernal, Utah
Open
Veyo Roller Rink
Veyo, Utah
Planning a visit? Helpful guides
All guides →Adult Skate Night: What to Know Before You Go
Curious about adult skate night? Learn what to expect, when these sessions happen, who they're for, and how to make the most of your first adult skate session.
Are Skating Rinks Open Year-Round?
Are skating rinks open year round? It depends on the rink type and location. Learn which rinks stay open all year and how to find sessions near you any time.
Beginner's Guide to Ice Skating
Learn how to ice skate with this step-by-step beginner guide covering skate fit, balance, first strides, stopping, and staying safe on the ice.
Beginner's Guide to Roller Skating
Learn how to roller skate with this beginner-friendly guide covering gear, stance, basic moves, and safety tips to get you rolling with confidence.
Skating in Utah is shaped heavily by elevation and climate. The Salt Lake Valley sits above 4,200 feet, and cold, snowy winters combined with dry, hot summers push most year-round operations indoors, while seasonal outdoor ice surfaces appear in mountain towns and downtown plazas during the coldest months. The state has a long winter-sports tradition, anchored by the legacy of the 2002 Winter Olympics held in and around Salt Lake City, and that infrastructure still supports figure skating, speed skating, and hockey programs today. Population is concentrated along the Wasatch Front corridor running from Ogden through Salt Lake City to Provo and Orem, which is where most indoor rinks cluster. Southern Utah, with its milder winters and smaller cities like Cedar City and St. George, has fewer venues but still supports year-round indoor skating.
Most skating rinks in Utah open for public sessions in the early afternoon on weekdays, typically between 3 and 4 p.m. after school dismissal, and run later into the evening on Fridays and Saturdays, often until 10 or 11 p.m. Weekend matinee sessions starting around noon are common and tend to be the busiest. Admission generally runs $8 to $14 per skater, with skate rental adding another $3 to $5; ice rinks attached to municipal recreation complexes sometimes offer reduced pricing for local residents. Family-friendly extras such as arcade rooms, birthday party packages, and snack bars are standard at roller venues, and group learn-to-skate lessons for young children are widely available at ice facilities across the state.
To find what works for your group, scroll down to browse the full list of skating rinks in Utah, or use the city filter to narrow results to Orem, Sandy, Salt Lake City, or any other town in the directory. Each listing links to a detail page with the rink's address, posted hours, phone number, and visitor reviews. Because public session schedules in Utah shift around hockey practices, figure skating clinics, school breaks, and private rentals, it is worth calling the rink or checking its official website the day you plan to visit to confirm open skate times before you drive out.