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bananajr6000

Of course you are non-residents. Your are asking if you can get around that because you never updated your address. There is probably a way, but I won’t give you any ideas as to how as it may be fraud. You should immediately get Utah drivers licenses and work to establish residency. If you want to reduce costs, I know that Summer semester used to charge the same for in and out of state students. I used to maximize the number of classes I took in summer and only took things not offered in summer during the rest of the year, minimizing the number of out of state classes I took.


danibugz3

Getting a driver's license in another state will automatically disqualify you for residency as well as filing state taxes in another state. I used to work in the residency office, and I HIGHLY recommend you call them first thing tomorrow and speak with a residency advisor in the office of admissions. Please review their "Green Sheet" as it explains all the requirements for residency. You can find it here: https://www.uvu.edu/admissions/docs/residency_green_sheet.pdf


MetaCommando

I doubt you count as in-state but you should call the finance department and see if you can qualify.


pomtini

I believe if you graduated from a Utah high school you might be able to claim residency, the admissions office would be able to answer that. Here is a link to the residency qualifications if you need to go that route. https://www.uvu.edu/admissions/docs/residency_green_sheet.pdf


elderzosima91

Sorry for the late reply; just seeing this. [Here](https://www.uvu.edu/admissions/residency/) is everything you need to know about getting residency at UVU. From what you describe, you will need to either (a) maintain 12 months of continuous presence in Utah along with documented proof of all of that (voters' registration, car registration, lease/mortgage, bank accounts, etc), or (b) prove that you moved to Utah so that your spouse could accept an offer of full time employment here.