Utah: No Wholesaling-Specific Law
State: Utah | Status: No wholesaling-specific statute as of July 7, 2026 | Bottom line: Wholesale in Utah the standard way, contract then assignment then fee. What you cannot do, here or anywhere, is act as a broker without a license.
What This Means
Utah has passed no law targeting wholesalers. No disclosure form, no registration, no seller cancellation right, no limits on assigning purchase contracts. General contract law is in charge, and it says your contract is assignable unless its own language says it is not.
The familiar process works without modification: sign the purchase agreement with an assignment clause, find your end buyer, execute the assignment, get paid when the deal closes.
The licensing line is the one you manage. Marketing property or matching buyers with sellers for a fee, without owning or contracting the property yourself, is unlicensed brokerage. Keep it simple:
- Your ads offer an assignable contract, because that is your actual asset. They do not offer the house. Address, photos, and "for sale" framing on a property you have no license to sell is where complaints start.
- Only work deals where your name is on the contract. Principal, not middleman-for-hire.
- If open property marketing matters to your business, get licensed. Plenty of Utah wholesalers hold licenses precisely to erase this risk.
Watch Out For
- Unlicensed brokerage is the whole risk picture in Utah today. This is a fast-growing, investor-heavy market along the Wasatch Front, and busy markets attract regulatory attention, so keep the marketing discipline tight.
- Our source reports found no Utah wholesaling bill, passed or proposed. With about half the country regulating or debating wholesaling, a growth state like Utah could join the list in any session.
- Check back on this page. We update it when anything is introduced in Salt Lake City.
This is analysis, not legal advice. Confirm anything you rely on with a Utah real estate attorney.