Weber-Morgan Health Department
477 23rd St, Ogden, Utah, 84401

Contact & location
- Address
- 477 23rd St, Ogden, Utah, 84401
- Mail-in address
- Weber-Morgan Health Department477 23rd Street, Ogden, Utah, 84401
- Records for
- Ogden County, Utah
- Phone
- (801) 399-7100
- Official site
- Government website ↗
Last verified July 14, 2026
This office issues Utah state records
Ogden County follows Utah’s fees, eligibility rules and processing times. Compare the statewide baseline below before choosing where to go.
- $22.00
- Utah birth certificate fee
- 3–4 weeks
- Statewide processing
- 3,503,613
- Utah population
Office hours
via Google| Monday | 8:00am - 5:00pm |
|---|---|
| Tuesday | 8:00am - 5:00pm |
| Wednesday | 8:00am - 5:00pm |
| Thursday | 8:00am - 5:00pm |
| Friday | 8:00am - 5:00pm |
| Saturday | closed |
| Sunday | closed |
8:00 A.M. – 5:00 P.M.
Certificates, fees & processing
| Record | Fee | Processing |
|---|---|---|
| Birth Certificate | $22.00 | 3–4 weeksUtah estimate |
| Death Certificate | $30.00 | 3–4 weeksUtah estimate |
| Marriage Certificate | $18.00 | 3–4 weeksUtah estimate |
| Divorce Record | $18.00 | 1–3 weeksUtah estimate |
Processing times are set at state level — county offices do not publish their own — and are estimates that vary with demand.
The Weber-Morgan Health Department’s office or registry of vital records, offers a wide range of crucial services. These offices play a vital role in the protection and provision of essential documents such as birth certificates, death certificates, and marriage certificates . In addition to maintaining these primary records, they are responsible for managing and issuing copies of birth, marriage, and death records that occurred within the Township of Ogden. Alongside record maintenance, this office provides valuable services like issuing certified copies of documents, overseeing the registration of domestic partnerships, and offering assistance to rectify any errors detected in vital records. Through these comprehensive services, the vital records office ensures the accuracy, accessibility, and integrity of vital records for the benefit of the community.
Reviews
★★★★★3.5 (66)- ★★★★★Kennedie FaveroGoogle
Difficult to get ahold of. When I finally was able to get ahold of someone, the woman on the phone seemed very inconvenienced and had a condescending tone to her voice. For being a state ran facility, their employees could be a bit more professional.
- ★★★★★Jocie JenkinsGoogle
I spoke with Ryan about permitting for a tattoo studio and was impressed by how helpful he was. He answered all my questions, gave me great info I hadn’t realized I needed and truly made me feel like the health department would work with me & cared about my new business. I have other friends starting their studios and they have really had bummer stories about their county’s health departments so I was especially grateful that Ryan was so rad about everything. Update: I finished my inspection for my body art facility license and was treated so well by Nicole. We spoke on the phone before the inspection and she told me what I could expect. The inspection went well and Nicole was kind, thorough and helpful. I feel confident tattooing in my studio safely thanks to her!
- ★★★★★Ruth FossettGoogle
Would not let me get a death certificate foe my x husband for a death claim.
- ★★★★★Nick MGoogle
I wish the Environmental Health Office would realize we are all on the same team and we all need each other. It is difficult to go into their office and feel any sort of value as a human. They can't even look at you. The only employee, who's desk faces the front counter, looks at you through her two computer monitors and proceeds to attempt a conversation with you with minimal eye contact. The other employee's desk is 10 feet away from the front counter and turned sideways. They meet you with a defensive or put-off tone more times than not. The office itself is anything but inviting from employee's tone of voice, body language, position and setup of desks, and the dim lighting throughout. I would like to say this was a one-time situation but it has been my experience at least 90% of the time. During my last visit, I asked to speak to a supervisor about the way the situation was handled but he was on a phone call. I did speak with someone else about the front desk employees and I did speak my mind about all the things mentioned above so they could hear. Unfortunately, I am led to assume this isn't the first time they've heard this feedback. Who is going to show enough care to realize this not the way to conduct business? Who is the right person to help them understand that the Health Department and Business owners are all on the same team and should be working together to achieve a common goal? We were told the supervisor would call us but sadly, he never did... Is it the County Commissioner we need to reach out to? I hope the two employees I encountered enjoy their job - I did not get that impression and again, I would like to remind them - You can say anything with kindness - Everyone deserves respect - We get back what we put out. I know I raised my voice, I know the energy was heightened, and I could tell the two of you are used to this kind of reaction. I would love for you to find joy in what you do and be met with the energy you deserve, knowing you are putting out the energy you wish to receive. I apologize for my tone I chose in the end but I stand by 100% of what I said. Good luck to both of you - may we meet each other in a better light someday.
- ★★★★★A Squirrel NowGoogle
Website is dreadful. The contact via e mail does not work. Links to information doesn't work, specifically the food inspection information is not available to the public. I tried many other links and got so many 'Hmmm, it doesn't seem to be found' that I gave up. Reply Sometimes links work on an internal intranet but don't work on the public internet, that may be the issue here. I attempted to e mail you because I can show you what is happening when I try to access the food service inspection report. But in response to my email, I got a reject message '550 5.4.1 Recipient address rejected: Access denied.' I looked up the error code and it states: If the address doesn't exist, the service blocks the message before filtering even occurs, and a non-delivery report (also known as an NDR or bounce message) is returned to the sender. The NDR looks like this: 550 5.4.1 Recipient address rejected: Access denied. If all recipients for your domain are in Exchange Online, DBEB is already in effect, and you don't need to do anything. If you're migrating from another email system to Exchange Online, you can use the procedure in this topic to enable DBEB for the domain before the migration.