What Are Oklahoma Impact Fees?
Oklahoma lacks a general impact fee enabling act; growth costs are collected through utility connection and capacity ('payback' or 'pro-rata') charges, perimeter and development fees in some charter cities, and subdivision infrastructure requirements administered city by city.
Oklahoma City and Tulsa metro suburbs — Edmond, Norman, Broken Arrow, Owasso — carry the most structured utility charge programs. Oklahoma figures on impactfees.org are model estimates for early budgeting; confirm each city's connection and payback schedules.
Oklahoma figures are illustrative estimates from our statewide cost model — calibrated to local construction costs and community size — rather than verified fee schedules. Use them for early budgeting and site comparison, and see our methodology for how estimates are built.
Counties Covered
Our calculator covers all 77 Oklahoma counties:
Click any county to open the calculator pre-loaded with that jurisdiction.
Major Oklahoma Markets
Click any market to open the calculator pre-loaded with that city.
Oklahoma City / Oklahoma
Utility connection charges and payback districts lead costs.
Tulsa / Tulsa
Sewer capacity and connection charges shape metro budgets.
Edmond / Oklahoma
Municipal utility fees are among the metro's most significant.
Norman / Cleveland
University-market growth pairs utility charges with excise-style fees.
Broken Arrow / Tulsa & Wagoner
Fast-growing suburb with utility-driven one-time costs.
How the Calculator Works
- Pick your development type — Single-family, multifamily, commercial, industrial, or office.
- Search or pin your site — Enter an address or drop a pin anywhere in Oklahoma.
- We identify the jurisdiction — City, county, and state are resolved automatically.
- Get an instant breakdown — Water, sewer, road, park, school, and fire fees by category — verified where researched, clearly-labeled estimates where not.