OnCue 139 is a full-service convenience store and fuel station located on Oklahoma City's south side, combining gas pumps with a prepared-food operation and a rewards program designed to incentivize repeat visits. As one of OnCue's company-operated locations rather than a franchise, it reflects the fuel-retail model that dominates the Oklahoma market: competitive pricing on fuel, quick-service food, and a loyalty structure that makes the math worth tracking.
OnCue is Oklahoma's largest convenience store chain, and location 139 operates as a standard unit within that portfolio. You're buying fuel and grabbing food in one stop, not visiting a destination. The location includes multiple pump islands, an indoor retail footprint for snacks and drinks, and a hot-food counter serving breakfast and lunch items. Hours reflect the demand pattern of a fuel-and-food stop: early morning through late evening, with fuel available 24/7 at the pump even if the building closes.
OnCue's fuel prices track against competitor stations in Oklahoma City, including Love's, Casey's, and independent operators. The real distinction is OnCue's rewards program: purchases accumulate points that convert to fuel discounts. A gallon earned through points typically discounts fuel by $0.05 to $0.10 per gallon, depending on your point balance and the current promotion. That structure matters if you're filling up twice a week. For a single fill-up or occasional stop, the loyalty math doesn't apply. Fuel prices fluctuate daily; confirm current pricing before relying on historical figures.
The prepared-food counter at OnCue 139 runs breakfast sandwiches (sausage, bacon, or egg combos, typically $3.50 to $5.00), lunch items including roller grill selections and made-to-order sandwiches, and hot-dog varieties. Roller grill items run $1.50 to $3.00 each, lower than what you'd pay at a sit-down restaurant but priced the same as competitors like Love's. Coffee is standard convenience-store pricing, around $1.50 for a small. The food is functional: acceptable for a commute or road trip, not a dining experience. Quality is consistent across OnCue locations.
Casey's, scattered throughout OKC, positions itself as a competitor with similar food offerings but slower service on busy mornings. Love's Travel Stops, larger and highway-oriented, stock more variety and have bigger seating areas, but are often located outside the city core. Quiktrip, concentrated in the OKC metro, emphasizes drinks and slushes over prepared food and doesn't have the loyalty fuel discount structure. Choose OnCue 139 if you live or work nearby and buy fuel regularly; the rewards program pays back over time. Choose Love's if you want a broader food menu and don't need fuel. Choose Quiktrip if you're after coffee and a drink on your way somewhere else.
OnCue 139 works for OKC commuters on the south side who buy fuel weekly and want a small loyalty incentive to stay consistent. It works for people grabbing breakfast before work or a quick lunch item on a delivery route. It does not suit anyone looking for quality food; the hot counter is survival food, not better. It does not suit drivers south of the city looking for full travel amenities; a larger Love's location serves that role better.
Pull up to an available pump, pay at the pump with a card or tap your phone, and fill up. Inside, the layout is narrow and functional: fuel rewards sign at the entrance, roller grill and sandwich counter along one side, beverages and snacks on shelves. Enroll in the rewards program via the app or at the register (takes two minutes); every fuel purchase after that accrues points. Morning visits between 6 and 9 a.m. see lines at the food counter. Late afternoon is quieter.
OnCue 139 is open 5 a.m. to 10 p.m. for the building; fuel pumps operate 24/7 via card activation. Parking includes dedicated pump islands and a small lot for the building entrance. Street access is straightforward. Confirm current hours before a late-evening visit, as operational hours occasionally shift.
OnCue 139 earns its place in an Oklahoma City guide because it represents the dominant fuel-retail model in the state and because the rewards structure is specific enough to matter for regular users. If you're filling up on the south side twice a week, this location pays attention to that habit.
