Yes.
Salt Lake City, Utah is considered the end of the Mormon trail.
Mormon Trail to Utah
The Mormon Trail ended in Salt Lake City, Utah. Originally, there was nothing at the end but an empty desert valley and a really stinky salty lake, but the pioneers began building a city, so that by the time people stopped traveling the Mormon trail (due to the railroad coming), there was a big thriving city at the end of thet trail.
Mormon Pioneer National Historic Trail covers nearly 100 miles in Utah, and about 1300 miles total. From the trail's end in Salt Lake City to Washington D.C. is a 2100 mile drive, so from where the trail enters Utah at the border of Wyoming it is a 2000 mile drive.
The Mormon Trail ended in Salt Lake City, Utah. From there, many Mormons were sent to colonize towns all over the west, while others stayed in the city.
The Mormon pioneers took the Mormon Pioneer Trail to Utah.
The Mormon Trail stopped being used shortly after the railroad reached Utah in 1869.
The Mormon Trail led to the Salt Lake Valley in Utah.
Most Mormons followed the Mormon Trail, which was roughly the same as the Oregon trail until the Mormon trail split off to Utah in Wyoming. Some Mormon pioneers took a boat around South America, docked in California, and travelled to Utah through Nevada.
Salt Lake City, Utah.
Utah.
Brigham Young lead the first group of Mormon pioneers along the Mormon Trail to Utah in 1846-47. Subsequent groups came over the next 25 years lead by various experienced trail guides. The Mormon Trail followed a similar route to the Oregon Trail until Wyoming, when it went south to Utah rather than north to Oregon.