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Utah · going back to your name · .gov-verified federal steps Last verified 2026-06-15

Name change after divorce in Utah: the exact order + what your decree needs

To go back to your name after a divorce in Utah, start with Social Security — it's free, using a certified copy of your divorce decree as your name-change document — then your Utah driver's license / REAL ID, then your passport. Most states restore your former name in the decree if you asked the court for it; if your Utah decree didn't, you can petition your county or circuit court, and the steps below carry the federal part that applies in every state. The order is certified decree → Social Security → Utah DMV / REAL ID → passport.

A divorce is a lot, and going back to your name afterward shouldn't feel like another fight. It's mostly a sequencing problem: do the steps in order and each agency accepts the last one's work. We link the real .gov page behind every step, and we point you to Utah's own DMV page for the in-state part.

Did your Utah decree restore your name?

Most states restore your former name in the divorce decree if you ask the court for it. If your Utah decree did that, a certified copy of the decree is your name-change document and you can use it everywhere below. If it didn't, you can petition your county or circuit court to restore your name — the exact procedure varies by state, so we send you to Utah's own court rather than state a rule we haven't verified for Utah. And if you're simply returning to a former name, Social Security can often restore it from your birth certificate or prior records even when the decree is silent.

The order to change your name back (every step .gov-verified)

Start your application online if you wish, but plan to finish at a Social Security office in person — the fully-online path is documented for marriage, not divorce.

  1. Get a certified copy of your divorce decree (the court order that dissolved your marriage) as an original or a copy certified by the issuing court. SSA cannot accept photocopies or notarized copies.

    SSA: 'All documents submitted must be either originals or certified copies by the issuing agency; photocopies or notarized copies cannot be accepted.' To prove a legal name change after divorce you show a certified divorce, dissolution, or annulment decree. SSA accepts a court decree of divorce/annulment as the name-change event (SSA POMS RM 10212.060).

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  2. Confirm the name your decree supports: the name stated in the decree, your restored former name, or — for a brand-new name — a separate court order.

    If the decree states your new name, that is the name SSA will put on the card. If the decree is silent, SSA can restore a FORMER name you previously held (such as a maiden name) using your birth certificate or its own prior records (SSA POMS RM 10212.065). A BRAND-NEW name you never held is not established by a divorce decree alone — it requires a court-ordered legal name change, i.e. a court ORDER, not just a name-change petition (SSA POMS RM 10212.080).

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  3. Plan to apply in person: start the application online if you wish, then bring your documents to a local Social Security office or card center to complete it.

    SSA's fully-online name-change path is documented only for a name change based on marriage in participating states; it is not established for a name change after divorce. To avoid a false expectation, plan to appear in person at a Social Security office or card center (you can still start the application online and bring your documents in). Confirm the current options for your situation on the live SSA Change Name page.

    Source
  4. Provide evidence of your identity, the name-change event, and (if SSA doesn't already have it) U.S. citizenship or lawful status.

    You provide evidence of identity, your new legal name and the name-change event (your certified divorce decree, plus a birth certificate or prior records if you're restoring a former name the decree didn't state), and — if needed — proof of U.S. citizenship or lawful noncitizen status. Acceptable proof of identity includes a U.S. driver's license, state-issued non-driver ID card, or U.S. passport.

    Source
  5. Receive your replacement Social Security card with your new name by mail. There is no charge.

    SSA states changing your name on the card is always free. SSA's Change Name life-events page states a replacement card arrives by mail; treat any quoted mailing window as an estimate, not a guarantee.

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The Utah driver's license / REAL ID step

After Social Security reflects your name, update your Utah driver's license / REAL ID. Bring your updated Social Security record and a certified copy of your decree; the decree is the document that traces your old name to your restored one. This step is the same whether your name change came from a marriage or a divorce, so the Utah facts below — verified against Utah Driver License Division (DLD) — apply to you.

  • Agency: Utah Driver License Division (DLD).
  • In person: Utah requires you to change the name on your card in person at a license office — it can't be done online. Take your certified decree and your updated Social Security record with you.
  • Replacement card fee: Driver license replacement (Class D) for name change$23.00. Utah issues a replacement card to carry your restored name; the government forms themselves stay free. Official Utah fee page →

Utah Driver License Division (DLD) — official name-change page →

The federal steps (the same in every state)

Your Utah DMV step sits between Social Security and your passport. These three are identical wherever you live.

We don't state Utah's decree-restoration procedure as a confirmed rule, because it varies by state and we haven't verified it for Utah. What's above — the federal steps, the free Social Security card, and your Utah DMV link — is checked against the official .gov pages.

See your exact steps free

Answer a few quick questions and we'll tell you what to do first, second, and third for your exact situation — each step linked to the real .gov page. No account, no card.

Frequently asked questions

Do I change my name at the Utah DMV or Social Security first after a divorce?
Social Security first. State DMVs verify your name against Social Security's records, so updating Social Security before the Utah DMV keeps your license or REAL ID from being rejected on a name mismatch. You bring a certified copy of your divorce decree as your name-change document.
Does my Utah divorce decree restore my former name automatically?
Not always. Most states restore your former name in the divorce decree if you ask the court for it. If your decree didn't, you can petition your county or circuit court to do it — the exact procedure varies by state, so we route you to your Utah court rather than assert a rule we haven't verified. If you're simply going back to a former name, Social Security can often restore it from your birth certificate or prior records even when the decree is silent.
Where do I get a copy of my Utah divorce decree?
From the clerk of the county or city court where your divorce was granted. They'll tell you how to order a certified copy, what it costs, and what they need. Order a couple of certified copies — agencies require an original or an issuing-agency-certified copy, not a photocopy.
How much does it cost to change your name back after divorce in Utah?
The Social Security card is free. A passport name change is free within 1 year of issuance (Form DS-5504), otherwise a paid renewal. In Utah, the replacement card to carry your restored name is Driver license replacement (Class D) for name change — $23.00, per Utah Driver License Division (DLD). The government forms themselves are always free.

Changed your name in a marriage instead?

If you're here for a marriage name change in Utah, not a divorce, the order and the documents differ.

Name change after marriage in Utah

Not legal advice · Not a government service · Not affiliated with any government agency.