You may be eligible for the primary residential exemption if you occupy your home for 183 consecutive days or more in a calendar year. The exemption applies to your house and up to one acre of land. Apartments, condos and mobile homes also qualify.
PARENTS: Your minor driver may obtain a learner permit at the age of 15. Must carry a learner permit for six (6) months before being able to apply for a driver license (cannot apply until at least 16 years of age.)
To qualify, a child must be your son, daughter, stepchild, or foster child, or a descendant (for example, your grandchild) of any of them; or your brother, sister, half-brother, half-sister, stepbrother, or stepsister, or a descendant of any of them.
Questions about the 29 Day Rule For the Undergraduate One Year Rule Policy, you must show proof of physical presence for 12 continuous months in Utah. You may not have more than 29 days total with presence unaccounted for or outside of the state of Utah.
You maintain a place of abode (i.e., the place where you usually live) in Utah and spent 183 or more days of the tax year in Utah. You or your spouse did not vote in Utah during the tax year but voted in Utah in any of the three prior years and were not registered to vote in another state during those three years.
You will need to live in Utah for at least 12 continuous months, apply for residency with all required documents attached to your application, and be approved residency BEFORE you leave Utah.
To satisfy the 183-day requirement, count: All of the days you were present in the current year, One-third of the days you were present in the first year before the current year, and. One-sixth of the days you were present in the second year before the current year.
To fulfill Utah state residency requirements, you must show you have lived in Utah for 12 months.
Questions about the 29 Day Rule For the Undergraduate One Year Rule Policy, you must show proof of physical presence for 12 continuous months in Utah. You may not have more than 29 days total with presence unaccounted for or outside of the state of Utah.