Our Mission
Oklahoma has one of the most decentralized energy rebate landscapes in the country. Programs are run by federal agencies, the state, four major investor-owned utilities, two of the largest municipally owned utilities in the U.S., and dozens of electric cooperatives — and they don't talk to each other. OklahomaRebates.com exists to make it easier for homeowners to find every dollar they qualify for.
Who We Are
We're an independent resource focused exclusively on Oklahoma. We are not affiliated with any government agency, utility provider, manufacturer, or contractor. We don't take referral fees from contractors and we don't sell leads. Our goal is to present clear, neutral information so Oklahomans can make informed decisions about home upgrades.
Why Oklahoma-Specific Matters
Most national rebate sites flatten the entire U.S. into one experience. That falls apart in Oklahoma, because:
- Your utility (the company you pay) is usually different from your utility (the company that pays the rebate)
- Oklahoma has no statewide rebate program — the OCC sets efficiency targets, but each utility designs its own incentives
- Rebate eligibility is determined by service territory, not ZIP code or city limits
- Cooling drives 40–50% of an average Oklahoma electric bill, so HVAC and building-envelope upgrades pay back faster here than anywhere else
What We Cover
- Federal incentives that apply to Oklahoma homeowners (25C, 25D, IRA HEAR/HOMES)
- Investor-owned utility programs (OG&E, PSO, AEP/PSO, Western Farmers Electric Co-op)
- Municipally owned utilities (OMPA (Oklahoma Municipal Power Authority), Edmond Electric, Ponca City Utility Authority, Stillwater Utilities, Edmond Electric, Stillwater Utilities Authority, and others)
- Electric cooperatives (OEC, Verdigris Valley, Bandera, Tri-County, etc.)
- City-led sustainability and weatherization initiatives in Norman, Edmond, Tulsa, Oklahoma City, Broken Arrow, Stillwater, and Lawton
- Qualifying upgrades: HVAC, heat pumps, water heaters, insulation, cool roofing, and windows & doors
How We Stay Current
Oklahoma rebate programs change. Annual budgets are set by the Public Utility Commission. Some programs end mid-year when funding is exhausted. The IRA HEAR rollout through SECO has been phased over multiple years. We review program details on a rolling basis and flag stale information when we catch it. If you find something out of date, tell us.