Sourced and dated
Every listing carries a disclosed source and the date it was last checked. Stale records are flagged and pulled from results until someone rechecks them.
Utah home-services directory
Pick a service, choose your part of Utah, and review the facts on each listing.
Search by service, then narrow the results to the places each business serves.
Every listing carries a disclosed source and the date it was last checked. Stale records are flagged and pulled from results until someone rechecks them.
“Listed” means published from disclosed sources. “Owner confirmed” means the owner reviewed it. There is no badge you can buy.
The correction page shows the current contact path. Flagging a fact never creates marketing consent, paid placement, or automatic edits.
The service index
Start with a trade, then narrow the directory to businesses serving your part of Utah. A category appears here once it has published listings.
Leaks, pipes, fixtures, drains, and water heaters.
Furnaces, air conditioning, heat pumps, and ductwork.
Panels, outlets, lighting, wiring, and troubleshooting.
Repairs, replacement, inspections, and storm damage.
Yard care, sprinklers, tree work, and outdoor projects.
Openers, springs, new doors, and same-day repairs.
Interior, exterior, cabinets, and color consultation.
Driveways, patios, foundations, and repair.
Small jobs, punch lists, and fixture swaps.
Windows, siding, gutters, and exterior trim.
Inspections, treatment plans, and exclusion work.
Home, carpet, window, and move-out cleaning.
Year-round roofline and architectural lighting systems.
Bats, birds, rodents, snakes, and humane exclusion work.
Browse by area
Each region page lists the businesses serving those communities, and no paid business gets moved to the front.
Homeowner guides
Original Home Service Almanac guides use current public sources and clear safety boundaries. They are separate from any future local update feed.
Inside each listing
Each page keeps practical details upfront so you can understand where a business works, what was checked, and how to reach it.
Named service areas show whether a business serves your community without exposing a private address.
Source notes and review dates make clear where the visible facts came from and when they were last checked.
Direct website and phone links help you contact the business and make your own hiring decision.
How listings work
Most directories blur the line between paid promotion and earned trust. The Almanac keeps its labels literal.
The record was built from factual sources we name, such as the business website or a public license registry. Nothing more is implied.
An authorized representative of the business confirmed the listing details. The label expires after 180 days unless the owner reconfirms, so it never goes stale quietly.
Shown only when a particular license or credential was checked, and always with the date and the source of the check. There is no vague seal of approval.
Paid placement disguised as organic ranking. Order is relevance based, and the method is documented.
A “verified” badge for sale. Trust labels are earned through confirmation, not purchased.
Fake reviews, invented activity counts, or manufactured urgency of any kind.
Your correction or claim quietly enrolling you in a marketing list. Confirming facts is not consent to sales outreach.
Keep the almanac useful
Suggesting a correction and confirming your listing’s facts are both free.Submissions are reviewed before public details change. Listing updates and confirmations stay separate from marketing consent.Suggest a correctionConfirm a listing