When you book a hotel in Oklahoma City, location shapes your entire stay. The Four Points by Sheraton at Quail Springs sits on the north side of the metro, near the intersection of Memorial Drive and Quail Springs Parkway. This guide covers what that location delivers, who it suits, and what trade-offs matter before you reserve.
Quail Springs is a commercial pocket roughly 10 miles north of downtown Oklahoma City. The Four Points occupies a spot among chain retailers, office parks, and dining nodes that cater to corporate travelers and families with specific routing needs. If your purpose is a meeting in the Quail Springs office corridor, or if you're passing through on I-44 heading toward Tulsa, the proximity is genuine convenience. If you're anchored to downtown attractions, Bricktown, or the cultural districts south of the city center, the distance introduces a 15 to 20-minute drive each direction.
The north side sits outside the downtown hotel cluster. Hotels downtown and in the Midtown corridor put you within walking distance of the Myriad Botanical Gardens, the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum, and the Oklahoma City Museum of Art. The Quail Springs location does not offer that. What it offers instead is access to Northpark Mall, multiple casual dining chains, and business-district walkability around the hotel itself. The trade-off is explicit: lower density of signature attractions, lower transaction costs for business stops and quick meals, and typically lower nightly rates than comparable chain properties closer to downtown.
Four Points properties follow Marriott's design standard. Rooms include a work desk, separate seating area, and bathroom with separate shower and tub. Standard rooms run approximately 300 square feet, which is middle ground for upscale chain hotels in Oklahoma City. The hotel operates a business center, fitness center, and restaurant or lounge on-site. Parking is complimentary, a standard feature across Oklahoma City's hotel market.
The property was renovated in the early 2020s, so furnishings and fixtures are current. If you're comparing this to other chain properties in the upscale bracket (Hilton, Marriott flagged properties), the room specifications are consistent. Differentiation comes through service consistency and location fit, not through exceptional room size or unexpected amenities.
Business travelers with meetings in north Oklahoma City will find the straightforward proximity useful. If you're attending a conference, visiting clients with offices near Quail Springs, or working a multi-day engagement at a north-side facility, the location removes friction. You check in, and you're already there.
Families driving through Oklahoma City on a longer trip may prefer this spot because freeway access is direct. The hotel sits close enough to I-44 that you're not navigating downtown traffic to grab a room and move on the next morning.
Road warriors managing multiple Oklahoma City trips within a year will recognize the Four Points brand as reliable and consistent. Marriott's loyalty program applies, so repeated stays accumulate benefits. This matters if you're comparing a night at the Four Points against a night at a Best Western or Holiday Inn Express in the same area; the brand loyalty structure differs.
Visitors coming to Oklahoma City specifically for museums, galleries, or restaurant scenes should weigh this location carefully. The Bricktown district, where you'll find The Loaded Bowl, multiple breweries, and evening foot traffic, is a 15-minute drive south. The Plaza District, which concentrates independent restaurants and local retail, is 10 minutes south and west. If your evening plan is to walk to dinner and then walk to a bar, this location requires a car or rideshare.
The hotel's restaurant or lounge will offer convenient eating without leaving the property. This is useful when you're tired or on a tight schedule. It's not useful if you're exploring Oklahoma City's food landscape. Quail Springs has chain options nearby (casual fast-casual and national brands), but not the independent, chef-driven dining that defines Oklahoma City's restaurant growth in the past decade.
Four Points rates in Oklahoma City typically range from $120 to $180 per night depending on day of week and season, though verification is recommended before booking since rates fluctuate. This positions the property in the upscale-but-not-luxury tier. A comparable Marriott downtown or in Midtown runs $160 to $240 per night. The Quail Springs location justifies a lower rate, and the rate differential often reflects the location trade-off accurately.
If you're booking specifically for the location (north-side convenience for business), the lower rate is a gain. If you're booking despite the location because it's cheaper, ask yourself whether you'll spend the savings on rideshare or rental car time navigating back to the attractions that drew you to Oklahoma City.
The Four Points by Sheraton Oklahoma City Quail Springs is a competent, straightforward upscale chain hotel that justifies itself through location and rate only if your Oklahoma City purpose aligns with the north side. Confirm your actual routing and meeting points before booking. If they cluster around downtown, Bricktown, or the cultural core, a hotel closer to those zones will cost slightly more nightly but will cut meaningless drive time. If they're genuinely in the Quail Springs corridor or you're passing through with no specific anchor downtown, this property delivers what it promises without the premium you'd pay for proximity to areas you won't use.
