This guide evaluates Hawthorn Extended Stay By Wyndham Oklahoma City Airport against comparable properties serving travelers with multi-night stays in the airport district, explaining what the property delivers, where its trade-offs sit, and whether it fits your needs better than competing options in the same category.
Oklahoma City's airport corridor—roughly bounded by Will Rogers World Airport to the south and the Meridian Avenue commercial strip to the north—has consolidated most of the city's extended-stay inventory. These properties target corporate relocation, construction crews, medical visitors staying weeks or months, and travelers needing kitchens rather than daily housekeeping.
Hawthorn Extended Stay occupies this market by offering studio and one-bedroom units with full kitchens, separate living areas, and weekly housekeeping rather than daily service. The property sits on the east side of the airport district, making it one of the closer options to terminal access if you're flying frequently.
The defining feature of any extended-stay property is the kitchen, and Hawthorn commits to this. Each unit includes a full-size refrigerator, stovetop, oven, microwave, and dishwasher. This matters measurably if you're cooking more than five nights: a week of restaurant meals for one person in Oklahoma City runs $150 to $250; groceries for the same period cost $40 to $70 at nearby Homeland or Albertsons locations on Northwest Expressway.
Studio units run roughly 300 to 350 square feet. One-bedroom layouts add a separate sleeping area and typically start around 450 square feet. Neither matches the space of an apartment, but both provide genuine separation between sleeping and living zones. This distinction matters during video calls or when sharing a room with a colleague; a traditional hotel room doesn't offer it.
Hawthorn includes free Wi-Fi, a 24-hour business center, and laundry facilities on-site. Weekly housekeeping is standard, though daily cleaning is available for additional cost. This model assumes you'll manage linens and dishes yourself most days, which reduces overall pricing but requires different habits than traditional hotel stays.
Nightly rates at Hawthorn typically range from $70 to $110 depending on season and room type (verification recommended, as rates adjust quarterly). The cost advantage appears in extended bookings: weekly rates are often 10 to 15 percent below nightly rates multiplied by seven, and monthly rates drop another 15 to 20 percent. A stay of 30 nights at the nightly rate might cost $2,400 to $3,300; the same stay booked as a monthly commitment often runs $1,800 to $2,400. This structure rewards planners over walk-ins.
Many business travelers book Hawthorn through corporate rate programs; if your employer has a Wyndham partnership, you may access additional discounts of 5 to 10 percent.
La Quinta by Wyndham Oklahoma City Airport sits three miles north on the same commercial corridor. La Quinta competes on price, with nightly rates typically $10 to $20 lower than Hawthorn, but its extended-stay units are fewer. La Quinta is better for single-night stops; Hawthorn is better for month-long stays where the weekly-rate discount becomes significant.
Candlewood Suites Oklahoma City operates on the northwest side of the airport district, about four miles away. Candlewood emphasizes larger floor plans—studios closer to 400 square feet, one-bedrooms around 550 square feet—and includes a grocery-delivery partnership. If your priority is maximum living space and someone else handling grocery runs, Candlewood justifies a modest premium over Hawthorn. Its nightly rate starts slightly higher but compresses further on monthly bookings.
TownePlace Suites Oklahoma City Airport (operated by Marriott) is closest geographically—about 1.5 miles from Hawthorn on the same access road. It has no significant pricing advantage and comparable kitchen amenities, making location the primary differentiator. If you need to move in and out of a rental car fastest, TownePlace edges ahead. Otherwise, Hawthorn offers no reason to choose it.
Extended Stay America properties in Oklahoma City (located north of the airport district near Bricktown) focus heavily on the budget segment, with nightly rates starting $45 to $60. The trade-off is visible: rooms feel compressed at 250 to 300 square feet, and housekeeping is reduced to twice-weekly. Extended Stay America works for crews prioritizing cost over comfort; Hawthorn is the choice if you're staying longer than two weeks and value a functional workspace.
Hawthorn's location on the east side of the airport district means you are near chain retail (Target, Walmart on the nearby Meridian strip) but not walkable to restaurants or entertainment. The property serves highway-facing commercial zones, not mixed-use neighborhoods. This is typical for the category and not a flaw, but it matters if you dislike eating in-room every night.
The nearest dining variety is northwest on Northwest Expressway or south toward the Plaza District (about 15 minutes by car). If walkable access to coffee and lunch matters, the central OKC core (downtown or Bricktown, 15 to 20 minutes south) requires driving.
Pet policies matter for extended stays. Hawthorn allows pets with a nonrefundable fee (typically $75 to $150 for a stay, not per night), which compares favorably to competitors charging $15 to $25 per night.
Parking is complimentary and unlimited, a baseline feature but one that Hawthorn includes without restriction.
Book Hawthorn if you are planning a stay of 14 days or more, have a working kitchen in your list of non-negotiables, and do not need to be within walking distance of restaurants or social spaces. The property delivers on what extended-stay hotels promise: modest pricing at scale, functional kitchens, and enough space to live rather than just sleep.
Book elsewhere if your stay is shorter than a week (nightly rates don't compress enough to matter), you prefer not to handle basic housekeeping, or proximity to dining and entertainment is non-negotiable. The extended-stay category itself requires trade-offs; Hawthorn manages them clearly rather than obscuring them behind amenity lists.
