This guide covers what the Best Western Plus Memorial Inn & Suites offers relative to other mid-range hotel choices in the Memorial district and comparable neighborhoods, helping you decide whether its location, room configuration, and price point fit your Oklahoma City visit.
The Memorial district sits west of downtown Oklahoma City, roughly bounded by Memorial Road and the area surrounding the Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum. Hotels here serve visitors attending memorial services, families visiting the museum, and travelers who prefer quieter surroundings to the downtown core. The Best Western Plus Memorial Inn & Suites competes in the mid-range segment where most Oklahoma City visitors spend $90 to $160 per night.
The Memorial Inn's position on Memorial Road places it within walking distance of the Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum, a major draw for out-of-state visitors and school groups. This proximity matters if you're planning to spend significant time at the museum; you avoid the 10-to-15-minute drive from downtown hotels and can return to your room for breaks without adding travel time. The neighborhood itself is residential and quiet, which trades off against the walkability and dining density of Bricktown or the Plaza District further east.
Access to I-40 from Memorial Road is straightforward, making this location practical for travelers whose primary destination lies outside the city proper. If your itinerary includes the Chickasaw National Recreation Area near Sulphur (roughly 45 minutes south) or destinations along I-44, the western location reduces backtracking through downtown.
The tradeoff: restaurants and bars within easy walking distance are minimal. You will need a car or rideshare app to reach the Stockyard City entertainment district (about 5 miles south), Bricktown (about 3 miles southeast), or the dining clusters near Automobile Alley (about 4 miles northeast).
Best Western Plus properties typically offer suites rather than standard rooms, and the Memorial location follows this pattern. Suite layouts usually include a separate living area with a sofa bed, a work desk, and a bedroom. This configuration appeals to families traveling with children and business travelers planning multi-night stays who want a space to spread out. For a solo traveler or couple, the extra square footage commands a higher nightly rate than a standard room at a budget chain, but less than full-service hotels downtown.
Comparable mid-range suite options in Oklahoma City include La Quinta (multiple locations, including near the airport and in northwest OKC), which typically runs $10 to $25 lower per night but offers fewer amenities, and Red Roof Plus locations, which fall at similar price points with smaller suites. Quality Inn and Sleep Inn properties scattered around the city compete on price but lack suite configurations. The suite-centric model of Best Western Plus means you're paying for space, not necessarily for premium finishes or service levels that distinguish luxury hotels.
Fitness facilities, complimentary breakfast, and free Wi-Fi are standard across the mid-range segment in Oklahoma City and should not influence your decision between chains. The distinguishing factor is room size and whether the suite layout justifies the nightly rate for your needs.
Parking: The Memorial Inn includes parking in the rate, a material advantage over downtown Bricktown hotels where parking often runs $12 to $20 nightly or valet service adds another $15 to $25. If you're renting a car for your Oklahoma City stay, factoring in parking costs across multiple nights can shift the financial calculus toward a western location.
Museum visits: The Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum charges $15 for adults, $12 for seniors, and $10 for children ages 6 to 12 (verify current rates as admission pricing adjusts annually). The drive from downtown takes 12 to 15 minutes; from the Memorial Inn, it's under 5 minutes. For families spending multiple hours at the museum, staying nearby avoids the midday round-trip to fetch forgotten items or rest between sessions.
Interstate access: If your schedule includes a day trip to Sulphur or Pauls Valley, or if you're continuing south toward Texas, the Memorial location puts you on the main route without driving through downtown first. From central OKC hotels, this adds 15 to 20 minutes of drive time each direction.
Dining patterns: The hotel's distance from restaurant clusters means planning meals in advance. Delivery apps cover the hotel adequately, but if you prefer to dine out within walking distance or browsing menus in person, this location requires a short drive. Downtown Bricktown, about 3 miles away, offers concentrated restaurant and bar options; the Plaza District (northeast, about 5 miles) has boutique dining and cafes; Automobile Alley has breweries and casual spots. Budget 10 to 20 minutes of drive time for dinner.
The Memorial Inn suits visitors whose primary activity or destination is the Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum, families with young children who benefit from suite space, and travelers whose next destination lies south or west of the city. It also works for those attending events at nearby venues or staying multiple nights where the per-night savings from avoiding downtown rates and parking fees offset the location trade-off.
The Memorial Inn is less practical for visitors planning multiple evening outings downtown, those attending events at the Cox Convention Center (downtown), or anyone prioritizing walkable urban surroundings and spontaneous restaurant discovery.
Book this hotel when quiet, space-efficient accommodation near the memorial and easy highway access matter more than neighborhood density and nightlife proximity.
