Oklahoma City offers year-round ice skating at two main facilities, each serving different purposes and skill levels. This guide covers location, pricing, programming, and how to choose based on age, experience, and what you want from the activity.
The Blazers Ice Centre in northwest Oklahoma City operates two sheets of ice and serves as the city's primary training and competitive facility. It hosts youth hockey leagues, figure skating clubs, and speed skating programs. Public skating sessions run on weekends and occasional weekday evenings; the most reliable way to confirm current hours is through the facility directly, as scheduling shifts seasonally. Admission typically runs $8 to $10 per person, with skate rental at $4 to $6. The facility draws serious young athletes and families who skate regularly rather than casually, and programming reflects that orientation.
The Ice Skating Center at Myriad Gardens occupies a seasonal outdoor rink in downtown Oklahoma City's Myriad Botanical Gardens, operating roughly November through February depending on weather and maintenance needs. This venue attracts a different crowd: tourists, date-night skaters, and families seeking a single casual outing rather than recurring participation. Admission runs $12 to $15, skate rental $3 to $5, and the setting on the gardens' grounds adds atmospheric value that Blazers cannot match. The outdoor location means weather can force closures; call ahead during warm spells or after ice storms.
For regular participation (weekly or more), the Blazers Ice Centre makes financial sense. Annual memberships exist for families planning sustained use, and programming—learn-to-skate classes for children, adult recreational leagues, synchronized skating—runs continuously. The facility's indoor location means consistent ice conditions and reliable scheduling.
For one-time or occasional visits, especially with out-of-town guests, the Myriad Gardens rink justifies the premium admission through experience rather than utility. The downtown location pairs easily with meals or shopping in nearby areas like Bricktown. Families with young children who are skating for the first time often prefer this venue because the outdoor setting feels less pressurized.
For competitive or serious training, only Blazers offers the infrastructure. The facility runs youth hockey tryouts each fall and figure skating levels assessments; if your child is exploring whether they want to pursue ice sports beyond recreation, this is the place to start.
Neither rink formally restricts age, but Blazers skews toward school-age children and teenagers due to its league-heavy programming. The Myriad Gardens rink draws toddlers and very young skaters more visibly, though that reflects atmosphere rather than an actual policy difference. Adult skaters find open sessions at Blazers on certain weekday evenings and weekend mornings; these sessions are less crowded than family times and good for rebuilding skills.
Skate quality matters if you skate frequently. Both facilities offer rental skates, but neither maintains rental equipment to the standard of dedicated skate shops. If your family will skate more than three times per season, purchasing skates becomes cost-effective and improves the experience noticeably. The Pettis Pro Shop near Blazers sells new and used ice skates and can fit skates properly; this step prevents the foot pain and blister problems that plague families relying on rentals.
Blazers runs structured learn-to-skate programs in eight-week sessions, typically starting in September and January. Class sizes stay small, usually four to six students per instructor, which matters when teaching young children balance and edge control. Current pricing requires direct contact with the facility. Private lessons are available but more expensive; recreational group classes suit most families.
The Myriad Gardens rink does not typically offer formal instruction; it functions as a public skating venue. Some families hire private coaches who work with students at both locations.
Blazers Ice Centre sits north of downtown in an accessible location with free parking; the facility is easy to find and has ample family amenities including a small concession area. The Myriad Gardens rink has limited parking directly adjacent; plan to use the Myriad Gardens lot or street parking in the immediate area, which can be tight on winter weekends. However, public transit reaches Myriad Gardens more reliably than Blazers for visitors without cars.
Both facilities close on major holidays. Blazers typically reduces hours on Christmas and New Year's; Myriad Gardens' seasonal operation means it closes entirely before March regardless of weather.
Choose Blazers if you want programs, consistency, and recurrent use. Choose Myriad Gardens if you want a single memorable outing with atmosphere and don't mind paying for experience. If you live in OKC and skate more than twice a season, Blazers' membership option makes sense financially. If you're visiting or testing whether ice skating will stick with your family, Myriad Gardens answers the question without long-term commitment.
