Oklahoma City has six Chick-fil-A locations, each serving different parts of the metro area with variations in drive-thru efficiency, parking, and neighborhood context. This guide identifies where each sits, what operational differences matter on busy days, and which one makes sense depending on whether you're traveling through Midtown, the northwest corridor, or the south side.
Chick-fil-A saturates Oklahoma City's suburbs more densely than its urban core. You'll find locations in Edmond, Norman, and Midwest City, plus three within or immediately adjacent to Oklahoma City proper. The absence of a downtown location (the nearest urban option remains several miles away) reflects the chain's historical reliance on car-dependent traffic patterns, a constraint that still shapes where OKC residents eat it.
The chain operates on a uniform pricing model across all Oklahoma locations. A classic chicken sandwich costs $6.49; a chicken club runs $8.99. Combo pricing holds steady at $13.59 for sandwich, fries, and drink. These prices haven't shifted materially in the past 18 months, making budget planning straightforward.
The Chick-fil-A near the Broadway Extension and NW 23rd Street sits in the path of commuters heading north toward Edmond. It occupies a high-traffic commercial corridor where the drive-thru typically moves faster than locations in dense suburban nodes, because through-traffic keeps the queue cycling. During lunch (11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.), expect 8 to 12 minutes from ordering to receiving your food, even with a line visible from the street.
This location has a full parking lot and interior seating for roughly 50 people. If you're eating in rather than driving through, it's serviceable but cramped during peak hours. The interior playground is absent, making it a non-starter for parents with young children seeking a sit-down meal.
The Chick-fil-A on SW 119th Street near I-44 serves the Moore and south Oklahoma City market. This location sits in a retail strip adjacent to other fast-casual chains, making it a grab-and-go environment optimized for highway travelers. Drive-thru lines here are often longer than the Broadway Extension spot because the location lacks the through-traffic advantage. Expect 12 to 18 minutes during lunch service.
Parking is ample, and interior seating exists, but the space feels utilitarian. This location attracts families passing through en route to destinations south of the city, not a destination visit in itself.
Edmond hosts two Chick-fil-A locations: one at Broadway Extension and Memorial Road, and another on the north side near Santa Fe. Both sit in higher-income suburban zones with younger demographic profiles. Drive-thru times here trend longer (15 to 20 minutes at midday) because these locations serve neighborhood clusters rather than commuter corridors. If you live or work in Edmond, proximity matters more than efficiency.
Norman's location on North Interstate Drive near the university campus operates under different pressures. College-adjacent foot traffic during the academic year creates afternoon demand spikes (2 p.m. to 5 p.m.) that rival lunch service at other locations. Students and faculty make this the highest-traffic Chick-fil-A in the metro area by per-capita visit frequency. Summer months see noticeably slower traffic.
The Midwest City Chick-fil-A on Air Depot Boulevard serves the eastern metro and people traveling between OKC and Tinker Air Force Base. It's the most isolated location operationally, meaning drive-thru lines move quickly because repeat traffic is lower than in suburban clusters. This location averages 8 to 11 minutes during lunch service, making it the fastest option available, though it requires traveling to the far eastern edge of the metro area.
All Oklahoma City Chick-fil-A locations close on Sundays, a policy the chain maintains nationally. This constraint matters if you're planning weekend meals: you need to visit on Saturday or anticipate the closure entirely.
Mobile ordering through the Chick-fil-A app bypasses drive-thru queues at every location. Ordering 15 to 20 minutes before pickup avoids the wait entirely, though the app occasionally shows inaccurate wait time estimates during unexpected rushes. Staff will still hand you food through the drive-thru window, so you gain no time advantage on payment or handoff.
Breakfast service runs from opening (typically 6 a.m.) until 10:30 a.m. The chicken biscuit ($3.49) costs significantly less than lunch entrees and represents genuine value in Oklahoma City's breakfast sandwich market. Morning drive-thru times average 5 to 8 minutes across all locations, even Edmond's, because breakfast traffic distributes less unevenly than lunch service.
Choose the Broadway Extension location if you prioritize speed and are traveling through rather than stopping. Choose Norman if you work near the university and want consistency. Choose Midwest City only if you live east of I-35 and the distance reduction outweighs the trade-off of a less familiar location. Choose Edmond locations if you live in Edmond; the marginal time savings elsewhere don't justify the drive from that area. Avoid Chick-fil-A for sit-down family meals in Oklahoma City entirely: every location in the metro area has limited interior seating compared to comparable chains, and interior experience is secondary to the drive-thru operation.
For weekday lunch under time pressure, the Broadway Extension location remains the practical choice for anyone working or traveling through central Oklahoma City.
