Utah Code
Utah Code § 63G-2-206 (2026)
Sharing records
✓ current as of May 2026
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A governmental entity may provide a record that is private, controlled, or protected to another governmental entity, a government-managed corporation, a political subdivision, the federal government, or another state if the requesting entity:
serves as a repository or archives for purposes of historical preservation, administrative maintenance, or destruction;
enforces, litigates, or investigates civil, criminal, or administrative law, and the record is necessary to a proceeding or investigation;
is authorized by state statute to conduct an audit and the record is needed for that purpose;
is one that collects information for presentence, probationary, or parole purposes; or
is:
the Legislature;
a legislative committee;
a member of the Legislature; or
a legislative staff member acting at the request of the Legislature, a legislative committee, or a member of the Legislature; and
requests the record in relation to the Legislature's duties including:
the preparation or review of a legislative proposal or legislation;
appropriations; or
an investigation or review conducted by the Legislature or a legislative committee.
A governmental entity may provide a private, controlled, or protected record or record series to another governmental entity, a political subdivision, a government-managed corporation, the federal government, or another state if the requesting entity provides written assurance:
that the record or record series is necessary to the performance of the governmental entity's duties and functions;
that the record or record series will be used for a purpose similar to the purpose for which the information in the record or record series was collected or obtained; and
that the use of the record or record series produces a public benefit that is greater than or equal to the individual privacy right that protects the record or record series.
A governmental entity may provide a private, controlled, or protected record or record series to a contractor or a private provider according to the requirements of Subsection (7)(b).
A governmental entity shall provide a private, controlled, or protected record to another governmental entity, a political subdivision, a government-managed corporation, the federal government, or another state if the requesting entity:
is entitled by law to inspect the record;
is required to inspect the record as a condition of participating in a state or federal program or for receiving state or federal funds; or
Subsection (3)(a)(iii) applies only if the record is a record described in Subsection 63G-2-305(4).
A record that is classified as protected as economic development information under Subsection 63G-2-305(2)(b):
may be provided by the governmental entity that possesses the record and classified the record as protected to another governmental entity in lieu of the second governmental entity entering into a nondisclosure agreement with the person that requested the record be treated as protected under Section 63G-2-309;
may be shared with the following entities when the entities are considering an economic development project:
the Governor's Office of Economic Development;
the Utah Inland Port Authority created in Section 11-58-201;
the Military Installation Development Authority created in Section 63H-1-201;
the Point of the Mountain State Land Authority created in Section 11-59-201;
the Utah Fairpark Area Investment and Restoration District created in Section 11-70-201;
the Economic Development Council created in Section 63N-1a-501;
a county where the economic development opportunity may take place or be sited; and
a municipality where the economic development opportunity may take place or be sited;
remains protected when shared as described in this Subsection (4); and
shall be treated as a protected record by any governmental entity that receives the record in accordance with this Subsection (4).
Before disclosing a record or record series under this section to another governmental entity, another state, the United States, a foreign government, or to a contractor or private provider, the originating governmental entity shall:
inform the recipient of the record's classification and the accompanying restrictions on access; and
if the recipient is not a governmental entity to which this chapter applies, obtain the recipient's written agreement which may be by mechanical or electronic transmission that it will abide by those restrictions on access unless a statute, federal regulation, or interstate agreement otherwise governs the sharing of the record or record series.
A governmental entity may disclose a record to another state, the United States, or a foreign government for the reasons listed in Subsections (1) and (2) without complying with the procedures of Subsection (2) or (5) if disclosure is authorized by executive agreement, treaty, federal statute, compact, federal regulation, or state statute.
Subject to Subsections (7)(b) and (c), an entity receiving a record under this section is subject to the same restrictions on disclosure of the record as the originating entity.
A contractor or a private provider may receive information under this section only if:
the contractor or private provider's use of the record or record series produces a public benefit that is greater than or equal to the individual privacy right that protects the record or record series;
the record or record series it requests:
is necessary for the performance of a contract with a governmental entity;
will only be used for the performance of the contract with the governmental entity;
will not be disclosed to any other person; and
will not be used for advertising or solicitation purposes; and
the contractor or private provider gives written assurance to the governmental entity that is providing the record or record series that the contractor or private provider will adhere to the restrictions of this Subsection (7)(b).
The classification of a record already held by a governmental entity and the applicable restrictions on disclosure of that record are not affected by the governmental entity's receipt under this section of a record with a different classification that contains information that is also included in the previously held record.
Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, if a more specific court rule or order, state statute, federal statute, or federal regulation prohibits or requires sharing information, that rule, order, statute, or federal regulation controls.
The following records may not be shared under this section:
records held by the Division of Oil, Gas, and Mining that pertain to any person and that are gathered under authority of Title 40, Chapter 6, Board and Division of Oil, Gas, and Mining;
except as provided in Subsection (9)(b), records of publicly funded libraries as described in Subsection 63G-2-302(1)(c); and
a record described in Section 63G-12-210.
A publicly funded library may share a record that is a private record under Subsection 63G-2-302(1)(c) with a law enforcement agency, as defined in Section 53-1-102, if:
the record is a video surveillance recording of the library premises; and
the law enforcement agency certifies in writing that:
the law enforcement agency believes that the record will provide important information for a pending investigation into criminal or potentially criminal behavior; and
the law enforcement agency's receipt of the record will assist the agency to prevent imminent harm to an individual or imminent and substantial damage to property.
Records that may evidence or relate to a violation of law may be disclosed to a government prosecutor, peace officer, or auditor.
Notes of Decisions
Cited in 4
cases (1 in the last 5 years), 2010–2026 · leading case: Doe v. Shurtleff, 628 F.3d 1217 (10th Cir. 2010).
Doe v. Shurtleff, 628 F.3d 1217 (10th Cir. 2010). “, Utah Code Ann. § 63G-2-206(4)(b) (providing for the sharing of records between other governmental entities for specified purposes, with the recipient required to abide by the statutory restrictions on access); id.”
State v. Oryall, 2018 UT App 211 (Utah Ct. App. 2018). “§ 63G-2-206(1)(b). Second, GRAMA provides that any governmental entity may disclose private records in its possession to "a government prosecutor [or] peace officer," as long as those records "evidence or relate to a violation of law.”
State v. Anderson, 2026 UT App 29 (Utah Ct. App. 2026). “We cited Utah Code sections 63G-2-206(1)(b), 63G-2-206(9), and 63G-2-201(6)(a) (2016).”
Doe v. Shurtleff, 628 F.3d 1217 (10th Cir. 2010). “, Utah Code Ann. § 63G-2-206(4)(b) (providing for the sharing of records between other governmental entities for specified purposes, with the recipient required to abide by the statutory restrictions on access); id.”
— Utah Code § 63G-2-206(1)(b) — 2 cases
State v. Oryall, 2018 UT App 211 (Utah Ct. App. 2018). “§ 63G-2-206(1)(b). Second, GRAMA provides that any governmental entity may disclose private records in its possession to "a government prosecutor [or] peace officer," as long as those records "evidence or relate to a violation of law.”
State v. Anderson, 2026 UT App 29 (Utah Ct. App. 2026). “We cited Utah Code sections 63G-2-206(1)(b), 63G-2-206(9), and 63G-2-201(6)(a) (2016).”
— Utah Code § 63G-2-206(4)(b) — 2 cases
Doe v. Shurtleff, 628 F.3d 1217 (10th Cir. 2010). “, Utah Code Ann. § 63G-2-206(4)(b) (providing for the sharing of records between other governmental entities for specified purposes, with the recipient required to abide by the statutory restrictions on access); id.”
Doe v. Shurtleff, 628 F.3d 1217 (10th Cir. 2010). “, Utah Code Ann. § 63G-2-206(4)(b) (providing for the sharing of records between other governmental entities for specified purposes, with the recipient required to abide by the statutory restrictions on access); id.”
— Utah Code § 63G-2-206(9) — 1 case
State v. Oryall, 2018 UT App 211 (Utah Ct. App. 2018). “§ 63G-2-206(1)(b). Second, GRAMA provides that any governmental entity may disclose private records in its possession to "a government prosecutor [or] peace officer," as long as those records "evidence or relate to a violation of law.”
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