A clear, current breakdown of assisted living, memory care, and residential care home costs across Oklahoma, Cleveland, Canadian, and Logan counties — and the levers that lower the bill.
By Oklahoma City Senior Advisor Care Team · June 28, 2026
In the Oklahoma City metro, assisted living generally runs about $6,000–$8,000 a month, memory care (memory care) $7,500–$9,500, and licensed residential care homes $4,500–$7,000 for private pay. These are local market figures, not national averages, and they shift with room type, care level, and the size of the community. Oklahoma is a genuinely high-cost senior-care state, well above the national median.
Geography matters inside the metro. Edmond, Norman, and Moore on the north metro run 15–20% above the Oklahoma City metro average on comparable care; Shawnee, Noble, Warr Acres, and Bethany in south King and Cleveland County typically run 8–12% below. Oklahoma City proper sits a little above the regional baseline.
Oklahoma's signature care setting is the residential care home — a licensed home for up to six residents, with 24-hour caregivers and a much lower price point than a large assisted-living campus. In dense markets like Shawnee, Guthrie, Choctaw, and Del City, a well-run residential care home frequently delivers more one-to-one attention than a 100-bed building for $1,500–$3,000 less per month. For many Oklahoma City metro families, the residential care is the single biggest cost lever available.
A base assisted-living rate usually covers housing, meals, 24-hour awake staff, housekeeping, and activities. The gap between a quoted price and the real bill almost always comes from what gets billed on top of that base — medication management above a basic tier, two-person transfers, incontinence care, and one-on-one aide time. Always get an itemized rate sheet before comparing communities, and ask residential care homes how care levels are priced.
The biggest levers are choosing a residential care home over a large campus, a shared room, and right-sizing the care level rather than buying a tier you don't need yet. Benefit programs help too: VA Aid & Attendance can add roughly $1,800–$2,900 a month for eligible veterans and surviving spouses, and Oklahoma's SoonerCare (Medicaid) with the ADvantage Waiver covers personal care for those who qualify. The Oklahoma long-term care planning may also provide a state long-term-care benefit for eligible workers.
A free local advisor can map which of these apply to your family and which Oklahoma City metro communities accept SoonerCare — often before you've toured a single building.
A free call, no pressure. We answer to your family — not to the care homes and communities we suggest.