Short-Term Rental Regulations in Oklahoma

State Overview
No statewide STR preemption; Oklahoma has no state law limiting local authority to ban or restrict short-term rentals, so regulation (including outright bans) is entirely up to individual cities and counties. The state imposes a 4.5% State Sales Tax in addition to any local taxes.

Cities in Oklahoma

City Permit Tax Rate Day Limit Primary Res.
Broken Bow ✓ Required 13.25% No annual cap · per-stay limit No
Oklahoma City ✓ Required 17.875% No annual cap · per-stay limit Varies
Tulsa ✓ Required 13.517% No annual cap · per-stay limit No

Oklahoma's STR Landscape

Oklahoma does not have a uniform STR framework, leaving regulation to individual municipalities. The state imposes a 4.5% State Sales Tax in addition to local taxes.

Regulation varies significantly across cities. Some cities (Oklahoma City) require primary residence, while others (Broken Bow, Tulsa) allow non-owner-occupied rentals. Tax rates vary from 13.25% to 17.875%.

Popular Short-Term Rental Markets

High-demand markets in other states — compare their permit, tax, and day-limit rules:

Other States

Alabama 2 cities Alaska 1 city Arizona 8 cities Arkansas 3 cities California 28 cities Colorado 12 cities Connecticut 1 city Delaware 2 cities District of Columbia 1 city Florida 24 cities Georgia 6 cities Hawaii 4 cities Idaho 3 cities Illinois 2 cities Indiana 2 cities Kentucky 2 cities Louisiana 1 city Maine 4 cities Maryland 3 cities Massachusetts 6 cities Michigan 4 cities Minnesota 1 city Mississippi 2 cities Missouri 4 cities Montana 3 cities Nevada 1 city New Hampshire 2 cities New Jersey 5 cities New Mexico 3 cities New York 5 cities North Carolina 7 cities Ohio 3 cities Oregon 3 cities Pennsylvania 4 cities Rhode Island 2 cities South Carolina 7 cities South Dakota 2 cities Tennessee 7 cities Texas 13 cities Utah 7 cities Vermont 2 cities Virginia 6 cities Washington 4 cities West Virginia 1 city Wisconsin 4 cities Wyoming 1 city