Salt lake gay clubs

The Ultimate LGBTQ Mentor to Salt Lake City

What makes this queerness exciting is that it’s unexpected. After Mormon leader Brigham Young led his band of religious misfits to Ensign Peak and proclaimed the Salt Lake Valley their promised land in 1847, the Mormon population exploded. For a long time after, the conservative beliefs of Mormonism overpowered local culture. In recent years, much of that has changed. The city’s LDS population slipped to 48 percent in 2018, and while the unwind of Utah is still overwhelmingly Mormon, the counterculture has finally laid claim to the state’s capital.


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Community in lgbtq+ Salt Lake City

Nowhere is this transform more pronounced than in Salt Lake’s flourishing LGBTQ+ people. In 2015, Jackie Biskupski became the city’s first openly gay mayor. She currently serves with three openly queer city council members: Amy Fowler, Derek Kitchen, and Chris Wharton. SLC is so queer-friendly that officials renamed a street in honor of the pol

Maybe we’ve been operating under an obsolete impression about Salt Lake City creature very conservative. We’ve had many former-Mormon friends over the years tell us stories about how they were ostracized for being Queer. Plus, Salt Lake City is the headquarters of the Mormon Church. But a recent opportunity to visit gender non-conforming Salt Lake Town updated our views. It appears that the city nicknamed “The Crossroads of the West” has come a prolonged way towards tolerance, acceptance and even support. (And so have some Mormons, evidently.)

With Salt Lake City’s Pride events happening this weekend of June 7-8, 2025, there’s much to celebrate.

Overall, Salt Lake City’s downtown area and neighborhoods are charming and sophisticated. New construction is happening on nearly every block, and swarms of historic buildings contain been renovated and repurposed into trendy addresses for restaurants, shops, galleries, hotels and living spaces. The streetscape is more vibrant than ever. Pockets of coolness can be easily found within walking distance of each other. Many businesses are flying rainbow flags, and the rest feel quite friendly and open.

Clearly things own changed in Salt Lake Cit

Drink it In:

Salt Lake’s Homosexual Bar Scene Is Growing, Thriving, and Never Looking Back

In a state famous for its religious zeal, Salt Lake City serves as a bastion of progressiveness, playfulness, and movement. In fact, the city’s been listed by Advocate magazine as one of the Ten Queerest Cities in America. The city holds one of the biggest and best-attended Pride parades and festivals around, with Pride Week festivities attracting tens of thousands of participants who light up the downtown scene in full rainbow-hued regalia. (There’s even a Utah Same-sex attracted Ski Week—real thing, utahgayskiweek.com, see you there.) 

Of course, it doesn’t have to be a parade to celebrate pride and inclusivity. It’s pretty easy for everyone of every orientation to jump in on the incredible fun that is Salt Lake on a hot city nighttime and the regular rotation of drag shows save the city sizzling all through the winter.

Check out a few of our favorite “officially” gay bars and gay-friendly bars—keeping in mind that, in this town, it needn’t be a “gay bar” for everyone to fit right in.

Club Try-Angles

Try-Angles is kn

Salt Lake West Side Stories: Upload Thirty-Two
by Brad Westwood

Although the Homosexual community had many prior informal political and social gathering spots elsewhere in Salt Lake Metropolis, a number of bars and taverns located in the Pioneer Park neighborhood served as a place to gather for Salt Lake City’s emerging LGBTQ+ communities.

In 1970, just one year after New York City’s Stonewall Riots sparked national gay and queer woman movements, Perky’s, which advertised as a bar for women but discreetly served Salt Lake City’s lesbian population, opened its doors on North Temple Street. Perky’s was eventually torn down to make way for the rebuilding of the I-15 North Temple overpass. The old west Salt Lake City was also the home of other LGBTQ+ gathering places, including the Rose Tavern opened in the early 1970s and whose name was eventually changed to the Rail; the Uptown opened in 1976 at 1500 South and 400 West; Studio 8 opened during the mid-1970s at 800 West and 200 South; and the Comeback Club opened in 1977, located at 551 South and 300 West, which also became a popular gathering place for members of Salt Lake’s LGBTQ+.

Like other established communities, the Pioneer Park LGB