Key Findings:
- Salt Lake City is now the most AI-ready city in the country.
- One in nine Utah businesses is already using smart tools.
- Over 19,000 new jobs were added in the past year, mostly in fast-growing industries.
- Nearly 1,800 jobs were lost in sectors vulnerable to automation
The 2025 National Index confirms what many in Utah already see happening: Salt Lake City is leading the country in AI readiness.
According to the 2025 AI Readiness Index from DesignRush, Utah ranks #1 among all U.S. states.
And Salt Lake City is the driving force behind that ranking.
Why Utah Ranks First in the Nation
DesignRush evaluated every state using six key indicators. Utah earned the top spot based on:
- AI Adoption: Reached 8.8% in early 2025, representing a 4% increase since 2023
- AI-related Searches per Capita: Reported 126.63 searches, showing that interest in digital tools is high across the state
- Legislative Preparedness: Received a perfect 4 out of 4, which means the policy environment is aligned with innovation
Salt Lake City plays a central role in all of these areas.
From new startups to public institutions, the region is moving with speed and purpose toward AI adoption.
1 in 9 Utah businesses report using AI.
Out of 161,064 businesses in Utah, more than 18,700 say they have used AI or intelligent tools in the past two weeks.
That is nearly 12% of the state's entire business community, and a majority of these businesses operate in and around Salt Lake City.
This includes retail stores, logistics companies, financial firms, and medical providers. What they share is a practical, daily use of digital tools to solve real problems.
And this isn't limited to large corporations. Small and mid-sized businesses are adopting automation and smart systems at scale.
Salt Lake City Is Adding Jobs in the Right Places
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Salt Lake City added more than 19,000 jobs over the past 12 months.
As of April 2025, the metro area reached 842,400 nonfarm jobs.
Since January 2025 alone, more than 7,200 new jobs have been created.
This growth is not generic. It is concentrated in the very industries most affected by digital transformation.
Here are the industries leading Salt Lake City’s job growth:
- Health and education roles increased by 7.3% over the past year, reflecting strong hiring in hospitals, clinics, universities, and research centers.
- Information services saw a 3.9% increase, including software development, data infrastructure, and network security.
- Manufacturing rose by 3.7%, increasingly relies on robotics, smart logistics, and process automation.
- Construction jobs grew by 5.1%, with many firms adopting technology for design, planning, and remote site management.
- Finance roles grew by 1.4%, driven by improvements in risk modeling, fraud detection, and digital transactions.
However, some jobs are quietly disappearing.
Is AI already replacing jobs in the city? Some signs say yes.
While tech-driven sectors are booming, a few industries are shrinking, and it’s not random.
- Professional & Business Services lost 700 jobs.
- Leisure & Hospitality dropped 900.
- Other Services (like salons and repair shops) shed another 200.
This totals 1,800 jobs gone in 12 months.
The sectors affected tend to rely on roles ripe for automation: office assistants, call center workers, receptionists, and more.
As AI tools become more affordable and accessible, companies are quietly scaling back human labor in favor of smart solutions.
Salt Lake may be among the first cities to show how the AI economy creates and replaces jobs at the same time.
Despite this, unemployment remains stable as the workforce grows.

Unemployment in Salt Lake City rose only 4.9% over the past year, which is less than half the national increase of 11.6%.
This shows the city is not just weathering change, but actively adapting to it.
The local economy is expanding while integrating digital transformation.
Public Engagement and Government Policy Are Moving Together
Utah’s volume of AI-related online searches ranked among the highest in the nation.
This tells a bigger story: People aren’t just curious, they’re actively engaging.
They want to understand how these technologies affect their work, their cities, and their future.
At the heart of this is the University of Utah, where the launch of a $100 million Responsible AI Initiative (One-U RAI) is redefining the state’s leadership.
The university is also shaping policy and partnerships across government, industry, and local communities, which it calls the One-Utah Responsible Community Consortium.
Salt Lake City is setting a new national standard.
It now represents one of the clearest models for how a city can adapt to technology while creating opportunity.
Data from DesignRush and the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows real progress across business, labor, education, and policy.
This makes the city a national example in a way that is practical, balanced, and scalable.