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Who lives in Murray: demographic profile of a suburb in transformation

A predominantly white population of European descent, with a growing Hispanic presence and a small but established Asian and Pacific Islander community. The Mormon (LDS) religion remains strong, though less so than in other Utah suburbs.

Murray has around 50,000 residents and has grown more diverse than many of its neighbors. The majority is still white of European ancestry, but the Hispanic share exceeds 15% and continues to rise, particularly in neighborhoods on the west side of the city. There is also a Tongan and Samoan community of considerable size relative to the city's scale, a legacy of Pacific Islander immigration that concentrated in the Salt Lake Valley since the 1970s.

The dominant religion is The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS, Mormon), but Murray is less saturated than cities like Provo or Lehi. Catholics are growing in number alongside Latin American migration, Spanish-language evangelical churches are active, and Buddhist and Hindu temples are a few kilometers away in West Valley and Salt Lake City.

The age profile is balanced: young families in newer neighborhoods near Vine Street, older residents in the historic downtown's established blocks, and adult students drawn by the nearby Salt Lake Community College. For newcomers, this means neighbors from multiple generations and less of a generational bubble.

Languages spoken
  • English
  • Spanish
  • Tongan
  • Samoan
  • Vietnamese
Main religions
  • LDS Church (Mormon)
  • Catholic
  • Evangelical
  • No religion
  • Greek Orthodox
  • +1 more

Cost of living in Murray: more affordable than central Salt Lake City, but Utah has gotten more expensive

Murray falls below the Salt Lake City average for rent and housing, but the entire Salt Lake Valley has become more expensive since 2020. Food, energy, and gasoline remain moderate compared to the US West Coast.

Living in Murray typically costs between 10% and 20% less than central Salt Lake City, primarily in rental costs. A new two-bedroom apartment near TRAX tends to be priced similarly to downtown, but family homes in established neighborhoods are considerably more affordable. The major price jump occurred between 2020 and 2023, when Utah became a destination for people leaving California, and values have yet to retreat.

Grocery options are solid: Smith's, Harmons, and Walmart cover the city, and imported products appear in Latin and Asian markets throughout the Salt Lake Valley without significant premiums. Energy is among the cheapest in the US due to the regional mix of natural gas and nuclear power. Gasoline tends to stay below the national average. Health insurance varies widely depending on employment, but Intermountain Health, which has its hospital headquarters here, offers competitive packages.

Transportation is where Murray stands out: having TRAX within the city means many households can manage with just one car, something rare elsewhere in Utah. That alone can trim several thousand dollars per year in insurance, fuel, and maintenance costs.

Where to live in Murray: neighborhoods for different budgets

Murray offers everything from 1940s brick homes in the historic downtown to new condominiums near TRAX stations. Quiet residential neighborhoods dominate, with no standout problem areas.

The historic downtown, centered around State Street and 5300 South, has small brick homes from the 1940s and 1950s, with larger-than-average yards and mature trees. It is the most charming section of the city and where many immigrant families manage to buy a modest first home. Murray Park anchors this whole area and serves as the main gathering point on weekends.

Near Fashion Place and the TRAX stations (Murray North and Murray Central), the market has shifted toward newer condominiums and apartments with higher rents but a more car-free lifestyle. Neighborhoods such as Liberty and East Murray, on the eastern hillside of the city, offer larger, newer homes with views of the Wasatch Mountains, making them the premium tier of the city.

Most streets are quiet, with wide sidewalks and low resident turnover. Murray has no areas with a notably problematic reputation, though stretches of State Street near the southern border have more commercial activity and less residential appeal. Newcomers typically find a home within two months if flexible about the neighborhood.

Recommended neighborhoods
  • Murray Historic Downtown
  • East Murray
  • Liberty
  • Murray Park area
  • Vine Street corridor

Job market in Murray: healthcare dominates, retail and technology sustain

Intermountain Medical Center is the city's largest employer. Fashion Place retail, corporate offices along State Street, and proximity to Silicon Slopes in Lehi expand the options.

Healthcare is the top-employing sector in Murray, anchored by Intermountain Medical Center, a regional reference hospital with thousands of employees and the flagship of the Intermountain Health network. Around it exists an ecosystem of clinics, laboratories, and medical suppliers. For nursing professionals, health technicians, or hospital administrators with recognized credentials, Murray is often a natural starting point in Utah.

Retail also employs many residents: Fashion Place is one of the largest malls in the state, and the State Street corridor concentrates dealerships, restaurants, and shops. Those seeking corporate work will find regional headquarters of banks, insurance companies, and energy firms. The proximity of Silicon Slopes, the tech corridor between Lehi and Draper 20 minutes to the south, opens doors in software and fintech for those with the right qualifications.

Newly arrived immigrants find it easier to access positions in construction, hospitality, retail, and entry-level healthcare roles (assistant, technician). Utah's minimum wage follows the federal rate, which is low, but the real market pays above it due to labor shortages. Basic English is sufficient to get started; advancing requires deeper proficiency.

Dominant sectors
  • Healthcare
  • Retail trade
  • Professional services
  • Construction
  • Hospitality
Major employers
  • Intermountain Medical Center
  • Intermountain Health (headquarters)
  • Fashion Place Mall
  • Murray City School District
  • Smith's Food and Drug
  • +1 more

Education in Murray: its own school district and nearby community colleges

Murray City School District serves the city with public schools that have a good reputation for the state. Salt Lake Community College has a campus in the city. Research universities are 20 minutes away.

Murray is one of the few small Utah cities with its own school district, Murray City School District, separate from the larger Granite or Canyons districts. This gives the system smaller schools with local administration, and the general reputation is positive: Murray High School serves about 1,500 students and offers AP programs, active sports, and partnerships with Salt Lake Community College for early college credit.

For higher education, the city benefits from its location. Salt Lake Community College has its Jordan Campus nearby, offering technical and two-year programs at low tuition, a popular option for adult immigrants returning to school. The University of Utah, the state's leading research university, is 20 minutes east of Salt Lake City. Westminster College, a private institution, is 15 minutes away. Brigham Young University, in Provo, is 45 minutes away.

Immigrant families find ESL support in all of Murray's public schools, and the district has a dual-language Spanish-English immersion program in some elementary schools. School enrollment is based on residential address.

Notable universities
  • Salt Lake Community College (Jordan Campus)
  • University of Utah (20 min away)
  • Westminster College (15 min away)
  • Brigham Young University (Provo, 45 min away)

Healthcare in Murray: home base of one of the largest hospital networks in the US

Intermountain Medical Center is a regional reference hospital with an emergency room, transplant services, and specialized centers. Small clinics and dentists cover the entire city. Access is excellent; costs depend on insurance coverage.

Murray is defined by healthcare. Intermountain Medical Center is the flagship hospital of the Intermountain Health system, with more than 500 beds, heart and liver transplant programs, a cancer center, and a trauma unit. For residents, this means a high-level emergency room is just minutes from any address in the city. The network has InstaCare clinics for minor urgent care scattered throughout the Salt Lake Valley.

Primary care is abundant: dozens of family medicine, pediatrics, gynecology, dentistry, and chiropractic clinics line State Street and 5300 South. Pharmacies operate through Smith's, Walmart, Costco, and independent chains. Spanish speakers are easy to find in nearly any medical office in the Salt Lake Valley; other languages require a more active search, but Intermountain offers a free telephone interpreter service.

The main challenge is the American insurance system. Without coverage, a single hospital night can cost tens of thousands of dollars. Employer-linked insurance is the most common path; the ACA Marketplace covers those without an employer. Utah Medicaid serves low-income residents with restrictions.

Safety in Murray: quiet suburb in line with the Salt Lake Valley standard

Murray has a below-average national crime rate, with issues concentrated around petty theft near the mall and TRAX stations. The municipal police force is active and visible.

Murray falls below the national average in violent crimes and has a profile similar to other Salt Lake Valley suburbs: incidents dominated by car theft, parking lot theft near the mall, and minor drug episodes near certain TRAX stations. Serious crime is rare in residential neighborhoods, and residents typically report a sense of safety in daily life, including walking at night in residential areas.

Murray's municipal police force has about 80 officers and maintains a visible presence, with community programs and regular contact with schools. The municipal fire department also serves the city. In an emergency, 911 functions as throughout the US, and response times in the Salt Lake Valley are typically fast.

For newcomers, basic precautions follow standard American practice: do not leave valuables visible in the car, lock the house, and check the neighborhood on Crime Mapping before renting. Murray Park is safe during the day, but like any American urban park, it largely empties out after dark.

Safer neighborhoods
  • East Murray
  • Liberty
  • Murray Park area
  • Vine Street
  • Historic Downtown
Areas to avoid
  • Stretches of State Street near the southern border late at night
  • Isolated Fashion Place parking areas after closing

Getting around Murray: TRAX, FrontRunner, and I-15 within reach

Murray is one of the best-served cities for public transit in Utah, with two TRAX stations and one FrontRunner station. I-15 runs through the city. The international airport is 20 minutes by car.

Murray benefits from public transit because it was planned around TRAX, the Utah Transit Authority light rail. Murray Central Station is a multimodal hub connecting TRAX, FrontRunner (regional rail), and buses, reaching downtown Salt Lake City in about 20 minutes without traffic. For those working in the Salt Lake Valley, this completely changes the calculation of living here.

I-15 runs through the city from north to south and provides direct access to the airport (Salt Lake City International, SLC), the Cottonwood ski canyons, Park City, and Silicon Slopes. State Street and 700 East are the two main parallel arterials, and nearly everything in the city is within 10 minutes of them. Bike lanes exist in some stretches, but Murray is not a bicycle-oriented city: recreational use predominates over commuting.

For newcomers, the upside is that it is possible to start life without a car by living near the TRAX stations. A Utah driver's license is required within 60 days of establishing residency, but many nationalities benefit from reciprocal testing arrangements.

Airports
  • SLC — Salt Lake City International (approximately 25 km to the north)
  • Bike infrastructure

Cultural life in Murray: the municipal park, summer festivals, and the Salt Lake Valley scene

Local culture centers on Murray Park, the Heritage Center, and seasonal events such as Fun Days. For theater, music, and museums, the city relies on its proximity to Salt Lake City.

Murray has its own cultural identity centered on Murray Park, which features a bandshell, a pool, and an amphitheater hosting the Murray Concert Band and other summer performances. The nearby Heritage Center, a community space, offers dance classes, senior programs, local exhibitions, and community events throughout the year. Murray Fun Days, during the week of Utah's Pioneer Day holiday in July, is the event that most galvanizes the city, with a parade, fireworks, and a day in the park.

Gastronomically, the city reflects the demographic transformation of the Salt Lake Valley. State Street has a corridor of Mexican, Peruvian, Vietnamese, Tongan, and Thai restaurants alongside traditional American chains. The Tongan and Samoan scene is especially visible in Polynesian bakeries and grills, rare in other parts of the US. Funeral potatoes, Utah scones, fry sauce, and the pastrami burger are regional dishes worth trying.

For major theater, opera, symphony, and art museums, Murray relies on Salt Lake City 15 minutes away. But the small-community feeling, where neighbors recognize one another at the grocery store, is genuine.

Notable dishes
  • Funeral potatoes
  • Pastrami burger
  • Fry sauce
  • Utah scones (fried dough)
  • Polynesian lu'au (kalua pig, lomi salmon)
  • +1 more
Annual events
  • Murray Fun Days (July, Pioneer Day week)
  • Murray Concert Band Summer Series
  • Murray Heritage Festival
  • Christmas lighting at Murray Park

What to see and do in Murray: parks, shopping, and a gateway to the canyons

Murray Park is the heart of the city. Fashion Place serves regional retail needs. For nature, Murray is a base for the Cottonwood canyons, with skiing in winter and hiking in summer 30 minutes away.

Murray Park is the top tourist and community destination. It covers about 30 hectares with large playgrounds, a barbecue area, a public pool, an amphitheater, a creek, and short trails. In summer it hosts concerts, festivals, and picnics; in winter it remains a destination for walks. Wheeler Historic Farm, right on the border with Cottonwood Heights, is a preserved 19th-century farm, great for children and free to visit.

Fashion Place Mall is one of the most complete shopping centers in Utah, with Macy's, Nordstrom, an Apple Store, and dozens of restaurants. The Murray Theater, in the historic downtown, is a charming independent cinema. For nightlife, the city is modest, but Salt Lake City is just minutes away via TRAX.

The greatest draw is the location for outdoor activities. Little Cottonwood Canyon (Alta and Snowbird) and Big Cottonwood Canyon (Brighton and Solitude) are 30 minutes away and offer some of the best skiing in the US in winter, along with trails such as Lake Blanche, Sunset Peak, and Cecret Lake in summer. Park City is 45 minutes away.

  1. 1Murray Park
  2. 2Wheeler Historic Farm
  3. 3Fashion Place Mall
  4. 4Murray Theater (historic downtown)
  5. 5Murray City Cemetery (historic)
  6. 6Murray Central Station (intermodal hub)
Parks & green spaces
  • Murray Park
  • Wheeler Historic Farm
  • Willow Pond Park
  • Hidden Hollow Park
  • Jordan River Parkway (Murray section)

Immigrant communities in Murray: Latinos, Polynesians, and Asians make up the fabric

Immigrants in Murray come primarily from Mexico and Central America, with historically strong Tongan and Samoan communities and a growing Vietnamese and Filipino presence. Regional consulates are located in Salt Lake City.

The most visible immigrant community in Murray is Latin American, especially Mexican and Central American (Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras), with a presence in construction, restaurants, services, and increasingly entrepreneurship (small groceries, food trucks, auto shops). Spanish-language Catholic and evangelical churches operate fully throughout the Salt Lake Valley, and Murray has established Latin businesses along State Street.

The Polynesian community, primarily Tongan and Samoan, is a historic demographic feature of the Salt Lake Valley since the 1970s, linked to the LDS Church's presence in the Pacific. In Murray it is visible in schools, sports (especially rugby and American football), and Polynesian bakeries and restaurants. Vietnamese, Filipino, Chinese, and Indian communities are smaller but established throughout the valley, with temples, ethnic supermarkets, and restaurants in West Valley and Salt Lake City.

For consular services and bureaucratic support, most immigrants turn to Salt Lake City, which concentrates the regional consulates. Organizations such as Catholic Community Services and the International Rescue Committee operate in the valley and serve multiple nationalities.

7,500
Foreign-born residents
estimated
Top countries of origin
  • Mexico
  • Tonga
  • Guatemala
  • El Salvador
  • Vietnam
  • Philippines
  • Honduras
  • China
Foreign consulates
  • Consulate General of Mexico (Salt Lake City)
  • Honorary Consulate of Brazil (Salt Lake City)
  • Honorary Consulate of Guatemala (Salt Lake City)
  • Honorary Consulate of El Salvador (Salt Lake City)
  • Honorary Consulate of Peru (Salt Lake City)
Community organizations
  • Catholic Community Services of Utah
  • International Rescue Committee (Salt Lake City)
  • Comunidades Unidas
  • Asian Association of Utah
  • Utah Pacific Islander Civic Engagement Coalition

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