Outbound
2 hours 5 minutes
Return
2 hours 20 minutes
Daily Flights
8+
Airlines
2
Timezone note
Salt Lake City is 1 hour ahead of Seattle (Mountain vs Pacific Time).
About this route
Seattle to Salt Lake City connects the Pacific Northwest with Utah's mountain hub. Alaska and Delta compete with solid frequency, serving ski travelers, outdoor recreation enthusiasts, and business passengers. The route peaks during ski season when Pacific Northwest residents access Utah's renowned powder, and during summer for national park visits.
SLC's mountain-ringed location means occasional turbulence on approach, and winter snowstorms can delay operations. Seattle's marine weather adds its own variability. The 1-hour time gain heading east is modest but still worth tracking. Landing alerts help ski shuttle operators and family pickups time their arrival at SLC's recently modernized terminal.
Track a specific flight on this route
How it works
Type the flight number for Seattle to Salt Lake City.
Enter the mobile number where you want to receive the alert.
We track the flight and text you when they touch down in Salt Lake City.
FAQ
About 2 hours 5 minutes southeast and 2 hours 20 minutes on the return.
Alaska and Delta both operate nonstop service between their respective focus cities.
Yes, SLC is the gateway to top Utah resorts. Landing alerts help coordinate resort shuttle pickups.
Avoid waiting at arrivals. Get a text the moment their Seattle to Salt Lake City flight touches down.
Get Landing AlertRelated routes
From the SkyText blog
What Actually Happens Between Landing and Getting Off the Plane?
Your flight tracker says 'landed.' But the person you're picking up won't walk out of the airport for another 20-40 minutes. Here's where all that time goes.
The Airport Pickup Formula: Exactly When to Leave Home
There's a formula for nailing the airport pickup every time. It's simple math, and it works. Here's how to calculate exactly when to leave home.
How to Track Any Flight in Real Time (2026)
A no-nonsense breakdown of every way to track a flight in 2026, from free websites to ADS-B receivers to plain old text alerts.
Founder, SkyText
Aviation lover who built SkyText because families deserve to know when someone lands safely. Has tracked more flights than he'd like to admit.