While the Beehive State's most populous areas might be obvious, its smallest towns span a slew of counties across the state.
The top six cities with the most people are in Salt Lake and Utah counties, but the 25 smallest towns are found across the state. Here are tidbits on each of them.
Population information is gathered from 2016 estimates by the Utah Department of Workforce Services.
25. Torrey
Population: 241
Location: Wayne County
Torrey is a gateway town for Capitol Reef National Park, according to its website.
24. Leamington
One of eight or nine railroad crossings in the small town of Leamington.
Joe Bauman, Deseret News Archives
Population: 231
Location: Millard County
Leamington experienced “boom time when the huge Intermountain Power Plant was built at Lynndyl, from the early to the mid-1980s," according to the Deseret News.
23. Boulder
Jake Heiner and Jeremy Strebel work on the Hell’s Backbone Farm in Boulder on Saturday, July 8, 2017.
Spenser Heaps, Deseret News
Population: 225
Location: Garfield County
Boulder was named after a nearby mountain and "rests at an elevation of nearly 7,000 feet," according to the Deseret News.
22. Bryce Canyon City
New housing in Bryce Canyon City on Sept. 26, 2007.
Tom Smart, Deseret News
Population: 223
Location: Garfield County
At the entrance of Bryce Canyon National Park, the city's Ruby's Inn employs 600 workers at the peak season with the park's more than a million tourists yearly, according to the Deseret News.
21. Henrieville (tie)
Population: 220
Location: Garfield County
Kodachrome Basin State Park located near Henrieville includes sedimentary monoliths "left standing like sentinels by the action of the wind," according to Atlas Obscura.
21. New Harmony (tie)
Population: 220
Location: Washington County
New Harmony is surrounded by Pine Mountain, Bumblebee Range and Kolob Canyon, according to the town’s website.
19. Hanksville
Population: 214
Location: Wayne County
An excavation team found four long-necked sauropods, two carnivorous dinosaurs and a possible herbivorous Stegosaurus near Hanksville in 2008, according to the Deseret News.
18. Interlaken
Population: 209
Location: Wasatch County
Interlaken sits above Midway and became a town in 2015, according to KPCW.
17. Independence
Population: 204
Location: Wasatch County
16. Clawson
Population: 190
Location: Emery County
Clawson got its name after The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints' apostle Rudger Clawson, who arrived and organized a ward, according to "Encyclopedic History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints."
15. Woodruff
The sign at the entrance to Woodruff.
Lee Benson, Deseret News
Population: 188
Location: Rich County
The temperature in Woodruff "plunged to 50 below zero on Feb. 6, 1899 — still the state record for lowest recorded temperature in a municipality," according to the Deseret News.
14. Junction
Population: 174
Location: Piute County
Junction was first known as City Creek when it was originally settled in 1880, according to piute.org.
13. Snowville
The First Presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, circa 1898-1901: left to right, first counselor George Q. Cannon, President Lorenzo Snow, second counselor Joseph F. Smith.
Fox and Symons
Population: 172
Location: Box Elder County
This Box Elder County city is named for Lorenzo Snow, the fifth president of the LDS Church, according to the Deseret News.
12. Cannonville (tie)
Population: 169
Location: Garfield County
The town was locally known as “Gun Shot” in the 1930s because settlers said "it was not large enough to be a cannon," according to the Deseret News.
12. Tabiona (tie)
Tabiona and Bryce Valley play for the 1A state championship in Richfield on Saturday, Feb. 18, 2017.
Scott G Winterton
Population: 169
Location: Duchesne County
Tabiona High School girl's basketball made the Utah 1A championship game in the 2016-17 season, according to the Deseret News.
10. Kingston
Population: 158
Location: Piute County
9. Dutch John
Population: 151
Location: Daggett County
The 10-day, human-caused Mustang Fire in 2002 burned more than 20,000 acres of forest and forced residents of Dutch John to evacuate, according to the Deseret News.
8. Hatch
Population: 140
Location: Garfield County
Meltiar Hatch Sr. and his two wives, Parmelia Snyder Hatch and Mary Ann Ellis Hatch, settled Hatch in the 1870s, according to OnlineUtah.com.
7. Fairfield
Population: 136
Location: Utah County
Fairfield's Stagecoach Inn — now a museum — was once a stop on the Pony Express Route, according to the Utah Department of Natural Resources.
6. Alton (tie)
Population: 119
Location: Kane County
6. Antimony (tie)
State Superintendent of Public Instruction Sydnee Dickson talks about their names as she greets student Sydney during a tour of Wasatch Elementary School in Clearfield on Friday, Oct. 27, 2017.
Ravell Call
Population: 119
Location: Garfield County
State Superintendent of Public Instruction Sydnee Dickson attended a two-classroom schoolhouse growing up in Antimony, according to the Deseret News.
4. Lynndyl
Population: 113
Location: Millard County
The Beehive State's fourth smallest town was "settled in 1907 as a stop on the railroad," according to Untraveled Road.
3. Brian Head
Population: 89
Location: Iron County
The ski resort at Brian Head has peaks (Brian Head Mountain rises to 11,307 feet) and "plenty of snow (400-plus inches a year)," according to the Deseret News.
2. Ophir
Built in 1870, the combination city hall and firehouse is still decorated Sunday, July 26, 1998, after Pioneer Day festivities in Ophir, Utah. During its heyday, Ophir had drugstores, general stores, theaters, two schools and a post office. Today, only a few people reside there.
Douglas C. Pizac, Associated Press
Population: 55
Location: Tooele County
Now packed with summer cabins, Ophir was once a mining town with drugstores, general stores, theaters, two schools and a post office.
1. Scofield
Greese fly off from Scofield Reservoir.
Stuart Johnson, Deseret News
Population: 23
Location: Carbon County
Utah's smallest town is located 7,800 feet above sea level near "Scofield Reservoir in the heart of some of Utah’s prettiest mountains," according to the Deseret News.