598

Neighborhoods in Oklahoma

  • Hugo

    Hugo

    The small town of Hugo, named for author Victor Hugo, has in recent years become a haven for people seeking to escape the hectic pace of city life. Along with competitively priced homes and acres of land, the amenities available to residents are a mix of restaurants, local businesses, a hospital and groceries. “People come here because they want a

    • Average Value

      $139K

    • List Price

      $49K - $2.4M

    • For Sale

      Homes For Sale

      30 Listings

    Hugo
  • Okemah

    Okemah

    Okemah is about 70 miles east of Oklahoma City on Interstate 40, and Tulsa , the state’s second-largest city, lies roughly the same distance to the north. “We can easily get to Tulsa or Oklahoma City, so we can still live in a small town but have access to the big cities,” says April Curry, a 30-year resident and broker and owner of OK Real Estate. The city

    • Average Value

      $138K

    • List Price

      $33K - $779K

    • For Sale

      Homes For Sale

      17 Listings

    Okemah
  • Seminole

    Seminole

    The heyday of Seminole, Oklahoma, came in the 1920s, when the discovery of an oil well sparked a population boom. The town of just over 850 residents ballooned to a small city with between 25,000 and 30,000 by 1926. Today, however, the population has waned again, down to just over 7,000. “I’d say it has a real small-town vibe,” says Edward Davis,

    • Average Value

      $135K

    • List Price

      $21K - $575K

    • For Sale

      Homes For Sale

      60 Listings

    Seminole
  • Alva

    Alva

    The small town of Alva blends city living with controlled growth in rural northwestern Oklahoma. This Woods County community is home to wheat and cattle farming, as well as oil and gas production. But according to Realtor Brenda Hood of Schuessler Real Estate, a lifelong local, Alva takes a measured approach to expansion. “When the oil booms hit

    • Average Value

      $134K

    • List Price

      $30K - $421K

    • For Sale

      Homes For Sale

      39 Listings

    Alva
  • Hominy

    Hominy

    The small town of Hominy grew through ranching, oil and deep-rooted Osage Nation culture. Founded in the 1880s as a trading post on the Osage cattle trail, this community of about 3,300 tucked into the hills of Osage County, embraces its heritage. Each June the Hominy American Indian Festival fills Peh-Tse-Moie Park with dance, song and crafts.

    • Average Value

      $134K

    • List Price

      $20K - $399K

    • For Sale

      Homes For Sale

      6 Listings

    Hominy
  • Nowata

    Nowata

    Everyone is welcome in Nowata. The city’s name comes from its days as a Native American settlement; the Delaware tribe called the area “no-we-ata,” meaning “welcome.” Today, the area is part of the Cherokee Nation Reservation, and around 15% of residents are part of the tribe. The city honors its Native American heritage with its slogan: “Welcome

    • Average Value

      $133K

    • List Price

      $41K - $368K

    • For Sale

      Homes For Sale

      16 Listings

    Nowata
  • /21

    Geary

    Geary, OK, a rural town 50 miles west of Oklahoma City, offers affordable homes and farmland. It hosts the nation's oldest high school wrestling invitational and is near American Horse Lake. Geary High School has a high rating.

    • Average Value

      $131K

    • List Price

      $25K - $387K

    • For Sale

      Homes For Sale

      4 Listings

    Geary
  • Fairview

    Fairview

    Located south of the Cimarron River, Fairview offers residents a small downtown with plenty of single-family homes and access to outdoor attractions. This community of over 2,700 acts as the seat of Major County, with oil and gas industry acting as a major employer, with agriculture also present. However, citizens do need to commute to access more

    • Average Value

      $130K

    • List Price

      $55K - $227K

    • For Sale

      Homes For Sale

      4 Listings

    Fairview
  • Sayre

    Sayre

    Overlooking a stretch of the former U.S. Route 66, the small city of Sayre has the energy of a tourist destination and the charm of a historic, rural town. Visitors are drawn to the museums, campsites, and mom-and-pop restaurants dotted along the old Mother Road, now U.S. Bicycle Route 66. But the Beckham County seat, a community of about 5,600

    • Average Value

      $122K

    • List Price

      $28K - $374K

    • For Sale

      Homes For Sale

      20 Listings

    Sayre
  • Lindsay

    Lindsay

    While Lindsay provides buyers with plenty of single-family residences and a downtown near the Washita River, the fortunes of this Central Oklahoma town are based on oil and agriculture. Established as a farming community, Lindsay continues to produce crops such as alfalfa and soybeans. When the city struck oil in the 1940s, this led to a boom in

    • Average Value

      $121K

    • List Price

      $49K - $353K

    • For Sale

      Homes For Sale

      14 Listings

    Lindsay
  • Tonkawa

    Tonkawa

    Tonkawa rises from the Oklahoma prairie about 100 miles north of Oklahoma City . A towering grain elevator and surrounding wheat fields testify to the city’s reputation as “The Wheat Heart of Oklahoma.” Home to about 3,000 residents, it serves as the headquarters of the Tonkawa Tribe, which owns and operates area casinos. “It’s quiet, but the nightlife is

    • Average Value

      $119K

    • List Price

      $20K - $387K

    • For Sale

      Homes For Sale

      16 Listings

    Tonkawa
  • Wilburton

    Wilburton

    Wilburton is remote, and that’s how residents like it. The Latimer County seat has just over 2,000 people and is far from big-city life. “There’s a great sense of community because it's so small,” says Bethany Kreutzer, a Realtor with Re/Max Advantage. “Everyone knows each other and watches out for each other.” Instead of trendy restaurants and

    • Average Value

      $119K

    • List Price

      $68K - $347K

    • For Sale

      Homes For Sale

      7 Listings

    Wilburton
  • Watonga

    Watonga

    Watonga is a small rural town roughly 70 miles northwest of Oklahoma City. Founded in 1892, Watonga was originally a reservation for Cheyenne and Arapaho Indians and was named after a local chieftain whose name translates to “black coyote.” The population boomed in the 1940s thanks to the opening of the Watonga Cheese Factory and continued to grow

    • Average Value

      $115K

    • List Price

      $35K - $384K

    • For Sale

      Homes For Sale

      19 Listings

    Watonga
  • Healdton

    Healdton

    Once an oil boomtown, Healdton today is booming for its rural vibes and central location between big cities. "If you look at Carter County as a whole … you realize that it spins the real estate market in Oklahoma," says Jason McElroy, Realtor with TLT Realty and an Oklahoma native. "Because we're the halfway point between Dallas and Oklahoma City,

    • Average Value

      $114K

    • List Price

      $42K - $393K

    • For Sale

      Homes For Sale

      12 Listings

    Healdton
  • New Cordell

    New Cordell

    New Cordell is a small farming community in the Great Plains of Oklahoma. Located nearly 100 miles west of Oklahoma City, this rural town of roughly 3,000 people sits among several streams and creeks in Washita County. Along with nearby farms growing crops such as tomatoes, cucumbers and wheat, New Cordell also has local wildlife, churches and a

    • Average Value

      $112K

    • List Price

      $46K - $435K

    • For Sale

      Homes For Sale

      25 Listings

    New Cordell
  • Heavener

    Heavener

    Heavener is a small community on the eastern edge of Oklahoma. This LeFlore County destination of about 3,000 is 12 miles from Poteau, the county seat, and 40 miles from Fort Smith, Arkansas, the closest major city. Poultry processing plants anchor a manufacturing-based economy. The city also draws tourists to the Heavener Runestone, a featured

    • Average Value

      $111K

    • List Price

      $55K - $438K

    • For Sale

      Homes For Sale

      9 Listings

    Heavener
  • Holdenville

    Holdenville

    Winter wheat and soybean fields surround Holdenville, the seat of Hughes County. This community of nearly 6,000 has over a dozen churches representing a variety of Christian denominations, including Catholic, Episcopalian, Baptist and United Methodist. Holdenville’s healthcare system is also a draw. Realtor Nancy Sherry of Jack Sherry Real Estate,

    • Average Value

      $104K

    • List Price

      $15K - $1.3M

    • For Sale

      Homes For Sale

      15 Listings

    Holdenville
  • Hobart

    Hobart

    Once a ramshackle collection of tents on the southwestern Oklahoma prairie nicknamed “Ragtown,” Hobart is now the seat of Kiowa County, with a lively downtown district, robust recreation options and sought-after schools. “It’s mainly a farming community, but the new Elk Creek Kiowa Casino is big now, too,” says Re/Max Realtor Caressa Rester, who’s

    • Average Value

      $100K

    • List Price

      $42K - $513K

    • For Sale

      Homes For Sale

      25 Listings

    Hobart
  • Wewoka

    Wewoka

    Wewoka, Oklahoma, is a rural town far-flung on the plains east of Oklahoma City. It is the capital of the Seminole Nation, boasting a rich history that modern residents celebrate. “I have a couple of listings out there now, and the woman who is selling the houses watched her grandfather dig cellars for them with a mule and a plough,” says Janis

    • Average Value

      $95K

    • List Price

      $31K - $291K

    • For Sale

      Homes For Sale

      15 Listings

    Wewoka
  • Blackwell

    Blackwell

    Blackwell is an industrial town on the Kansas-Oklahoma state line. Located between Oklahoma City and Wichita, Blackwell grew rapidly through the 1920s thanks to the hundreds of jobs the Blackwell Zinc Company brought to the area. While the smelter is no longer in operation and the population has been in steady decline since the 1970s, Blackwell

    • Average Value

      $95K

    • List Price

      $25K - $309K

    • For Sale

      Homes For Sale

      25 Listings

    Blackwell
  • /20

    Anadarko

    The small city of Anadarko came by its name honestly. Home to seven federally recognized Native American tribes, this community of just under 6,000 is – as some say its name means – a “city of indigenous peoples.” Nearly half of Anadarko’s population is made up of the following tribes: the Kiowa Tribe of Oklahoma, Comanche Nation, Apache Tribe of

    • Average Value

      $94K

    • List Price

      $14K - $310K

    • For Sale

      Homes For Sale

      11 Listings

    Anadarko
  • Mangum

    Mangum

    Rattlesnake festivities and outlying pink-granite mountains draw eyes to the Red Beds of southwest Oklahoma, where the small town of Mangum offers quiet living. The community of around 2,700 residents lies among a diverse landscape of red plains, canyons and distant mountains – where a healthy rattlesnake population prompts a popular tradition.

    • Average Value

      $93K

    • List Price

      $14K - $394K

    • For Sale

      Homes For Sale

      19 Listings

    Mangum
  • Frederick

    Frederick

    Frederick is a rural community near the Oklahoma-Texas border with a walkable downtown, plenty of single-family homes and a selection of dining spots. The Tillman County seat was established as a railroad stop and farming community, the latter of which is still prevalent today, as many ranches and agricultural areas surround the town. However,

    • Average Value

      $88K

    • List Price

      $58K - $242K

    • For Sale

      Homes For Sale

      15 Listings

    Frederick

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