Where to Buy Flooring and Home Finishes in Oklahoma City

Floor and Decor operates one location in the Oklahoma City metro area, and understanding what it offers relative to other flooring retailers in the region will help you decide whether to shop there or elsewhere for your project.

The Oklahoma City Floor and Decor sits in the Bricktown/Midtown corridor and carries the standard Floor and Decor model: a warehouse format with high inventory turnover, builder-grade to mid-range materials, and prices positioned below independent showrooms. The store stocks vinyl plank, laminate, tile, and carpet in volume. Delivery and installation are available through their service network, though installation pricing varies by complexity and material. The store layout rewards self-directed shopping; staff availability can be uneven during peak hours, a common trade-off in the warehouse-format model.

The critical question is whether Floor and Decor's pricing and selection match your project scope. For a straightforward kitchen or bathroom refresh using standard vinyl or tile, the warehouse format works. For custom cuts, specialty materials, or rooms requiring careful pattern matching, you may find independent retailers more hands-on. Oklahoma City has several mid-market flooring retailers scattered across districts like Edmond and northwest OKC that operate smaller showrooms with higher staff-to-customer ratios.

Flooring retail landscape in Oklahoma City

Floor and Decor competes in a market segment distinct from both big-box (Home Depot and Lowe's both operate multiple Oklahoma City locations with limited flooring depth) and luxury independent showrooms. Independents typically carry higher price points and smaller SKU counts but offer better design consultation and faster problem-solving for tricky installations. The gap between Floor and Decor pricing and luxury showrooms is meaningful. A square foot of mid-range engineered hardwood at Floor and Decor might run $3 to $5; the same category at a designer-focused showroom can reach $8 to $12, reflecting the overhead of a smaller operation and in-house design services.

Builders and contractors in the Oklahoma City metro often default to Floor and Decor for spec work and new construction because the model supports volume purchasing, bulk delivery, and straightforward installations. If you're managing a multi-room project or new construction, Floor and Decor's ability to deliver consistent pricing across a large order is an operational advantage. If you're replacing flooring in a single room with specific aesthetic requirements, the retailer's catalog depth matters more than its warehouse convenience.

Tile selection and sourcing

Tile deserves separate consideration. Floor and Decor's tile selection emphasizes production-run ceramics and porcelain in common sizes (12x12, 18x18, large-format 24x48). The inventory reflects current market preferences: matte finishes, light grays, and faux-wood formats dominate. If you want specialty sizing, handmade tiles, or imported European stock, you will not find it in the warehouse. Independent tile specialists in Edmond and Nichols Hills neighborhoods serve designers and homeowners willing to pay for curation and sourcing.

The vinyl plank category shows Floor and Decor's competitive advantage most clearly. The store stocks dozens of finishes with waterproof cores, beveled edges, and realistic wood-grain photography. Pricing per square foot typically ranges from $1.50 to $3.50 for stock vinyl, well below mid-market independents. Installation through Floor and Decor's network (or using your own contractor) is straightforward because vinyl is forgiving; the risk of a poorly installed vinyl floor is lower than with hardwood or tile.

When to shop elsewhere

Three scenarios favor looking beyond Floor and Decor. First, if your project requires custom finishes, rare woods, or materials outside mainstream production (reclaimed hardwood, cork, concrete overlays), independent specialists will have both the inventory and the expertise to source and install correctly. Second, if you live in a neighborhood with strong design conventions (Nichols Hills, Edmond's historic core), a local independent showroom can provide context and past work samples for your area. Third, if you are installing over an irregular subfloor or in a space with complex geometry, the in-house design and installation teams at independents can flag problems during the consultation phase, whereas Floor and Decor assumes standard conditions.

Practical takeaway

Visit Floor and Decor when you have a defined specification: you know the material type, the finish, the square footage, and the timeline. Bring measurements, subfloor photos if possible, and clarity on your installation contractor (theirs or yours). The warehouse model works best when you can make a decision quickly and commit to an order. If you are still exploring options, sketching out design intent, or working in a highly visible space where the finish matters as much as the durability, spend time at an independent showroom first. The consultation is free, and you may discover that the design fee (typically $300 to $800 for a full-home plan) saves money on material mistakes. Once you have narrowed your choice, Floor and Decor will likely undercut the independent on price, allowing you to capture the savings after the design work is done.