The Outdoor Arena at the Sevier County Fairgrounds in Richfield, Utah gives event planners a raw, flexible stage for midscale gatherings across central Utah. The arena floor measures 150 feet by 220 feet, framed by covered seating for 1,035 and open benches for 1,500—2,535 guests total—making it rare in the region for a single outdoor footprint that blends shelter and open-air views. Operators rent by the half day or full day; ticketed events reserve the full arena for $1,000, and a $500 security deposit is held on full-day bookings to cover any damages before being released after the event.
This is not a museum piece or boutique venue; it’s a workhorse. The rectangular dirt floor and wide sightlines accommodate rodeos, horse shows, outdoor concerts, community fairs, demolition derbies, and vendor-lined expos. The covered seating protects a large portion of the audience from sun and light rain while the open stands keep sightlines unobstructed for elevated staging or full-sized agricultural displays. With flexible layout options and ample capacity, the space becomes a civic hub—where local 4‑H competitions rub shoulders with regional touring acts.
Logistics are straightforward: rentals span typical event windows (6–12 hours per booking), and organizers need to plan for power, staging, and crowd control since the basic rental describes dimensions and capacities but does not list included rentals or services. A refundable deposit policy provides straightforward financial protection while allowing promoters to operate pop-up ticketed performances without long-term encumbrance.
For visitors and planners, the arena’s value is its scale in a rural county seat. In a part of Utah where public venues are often small, this arena offers a rare combination of covered and open seating with a footprint that supports heavier production rigs and agricultural competition alike. It plays a consistent role in Sevier County’s outdoor recreation calendar, anchoring the county fair and seasonal events that draw participants from surrounding valleys.
If you’re planning an event here, treat the arena like infrastructure: bring your own staging, power, and seating upgrades if you need them; permit and insurance requirements may apply. For community organizers, it’s a dependable blank slate—big enough to draw regional crowds yet straightforward enough that a small team can turn it into an evening that feels much bigger than its rural address.
Booking is handled through the fairgrounds; organizers should confirm setup and teardown windows, request electrical hookups if needed, and coordinate parking and restroom services with staff. Advance planning for load‑in, staging, and waste management turns a raw arena into a smooth, professional event that serves both community gatherings and touring productions with regional reach.