When you're planning a trip to Edmond, Oklahoma—a suburb about 30 minutes north of Oklahoma City's downtown core—choosing lodging involves deciding whether to stay in Edmond itself or base yourself in OKC proper. This guide covers the Hampton Inn Oklahoma City Edmond specifically and explains how it compares to competing hotels in the area, so you can match your choice to your actual itinerary and travel priorities.
The Hampton Inn Oklahoma City Edmond sits near the intersection of Broadway Extension and Danforth Road, positioning it within a few minutes of University of Central Oklahoma's campus and a quick drive to Edmond's shopping and dining corridors along Second Street. This location matters because Edmond's downtown attractions—the Edmond History Museum, farmers markets, and locally owned restaurants—are roughly 2 to 3 miles south. If you're visiting UCO for a campus tour, attending an event, or meeting someone at the university, this hotel is genuinely convenient. If your primary reason for being in the greater OKC area involves downtown Oklahoma City attractions, you're trading easier commute time to Edmond against a longer drive back into the city.
The property sits on a standard commercial strip rather than within a walkable district, so you'll need a car to reach most services beyond the immediate hotel vicinity. This is typical for Edmond's newer development pattern.
Hampton Inn properties follow a consistent structure, and the Edmond location typically charges between $90 and $140 per night depending on season and day of week, with weekends commanding premiums. Summer months (June through August) and periods around UCO graduation and events drive rates toward the higher end. Winter weekdays often run $85 to $100. These figures reflect standard hotel pricing dynamics rather than insider knowledge, but they're worth comparing against other options before booking. Many travelers book directly through Hampton's website or app rather than through third-party aggregators because Hampton's loyalty program (Hilton Honors) offers free breakfast as a baseline, not an upsell, which changes your effective room cost when you factor in that meal.
This is a mid-tier hotel, not a luxury property. Rooms include queen or double beds, a 32-inch television, a work desk, microwave, and refrigerator. The property has an indoor pool, fitness center, and business center. Breakfast is complimentary for all guests, served from 6 to 9:30 a.m., and includes the standard hot items (waffle bar, eggs, meat) plus cold cereals and pastries. Most travelers find this sufficient; it's not a memorable breakfast but it's included, so your out-of-pocket cost per night effectively drops by $12 to $15 when you don't buy breakfast elsewhere.
A meaningful trade-off: if you need a true extended-stay setup with a full kitchen, this property won't satisfy that. If you're staying five nights or longer, an extended-stay property (there are several near Edmond) often costs less per night and gives you cooking ability. For three nights or fewer, the Hampton's included breakfast provides better value per night.
Edmond's lodging stock is modest. Within the immediate area, you have the La Quinta by Wyndham Edmond, which typically runs $10 to $20 cheaper per night but does not include breakfast and has less amenity density. You also have the Candlewood Suites Edmond, which emphasizes the extended-stay model (kitchenette in every room, weekly maid service only) and costs more per night than the Hampton but saves money if you're staying longer than four nights and cooking some meals.
For travelers whose actual destination is Oklahoma City proper—especially those planning to spend most of their time in downtown OKC, near Bricktown, or in the midtown districts—staying in Edmond makes sense only if you have a specific reason to be north (work, visiting UCO, attending an event at the university). If your trip is primarily about OKC attractions, staying south of I-44 in Oklahoma City puts you closer to restaurants, galleries, museums, and entertainment venues, eliminating a 45-minute round-trip commute from your daily routine. A hotel like the Colcord Hotel or the Skirvin in downtown OKC runs more per night but saves you time and transportation costs.
The Edmond Hampton serves its market well: business travelers attending UCO conferences or training, families visiting students, and people with appointments at nearby medical facilities. The property does not offer on-site dining (no restaurant or bar), so you're eating breakfast at the hotel and dining out for lunch and dinner. Second Street in Edmond has adequate restaurants within 10 minutes' drive, but this isn't a location where dining and nightlife concentrate. If nightlife or a robust food scene is central to your visit, this location is peripheral.
The pool and fitness center are standard for the brand. Parking is complimentary and abundant, typical for Edmond. If you're driving and plan to spend evenings in or near the hotel, that works fine. If you're planning a night out downtown in OKC, you're driving 30 minutes each way.
Book 30 days in advance when possible; rates drop measurably at that interval. Weekend rates (Friday and Saturday nights) are typically 20 to 25 percent higher than weekday rates, a significant difference worth adjusting your travel dates around if feasible. Tuesday through Thursday nights are the most economical time to book.
Before committing, verify whether your visit has a specific north-OKC anchor—a reason you need to be in Edmond itself. If you're visiting UCO, attending a conference at the university, or meeting someone who works or lives there, the Hampton Inn is a practical choice that avoids a long commute. If your primary destinations are in Oklahoma City proper, reconsider whether basing yourself 30 minutes away makes sense for a two- or three-night stay.
