Flamingo Tiki is a rum-focused cocktail bar in Oklahoma City's Midtown neighborhood that builds its menu around Caribbean and Polynesian-style drinks, heavy on aged spirits and fresh citrus rather than heavy syrups or commercial mixes.
The bar occupies a compact space styled with tiki décor—carved wooden elements, tropical plants, and island-inspired lighting—but avoids the kitschy extremes that can overwhelm some tiki bars. The focus is on cocktail craft. The owner has prioritized a curated rum selection over novelty, and the bartenders work from a menu that emphasizes balance between spirit quality and technique. Most drinks clock in at 2 to 2.5 ounces of spirit per serve, standard for cocktail bars but worth noting because tiki bars sometimes lean toward oversized, syrup-heavy drinks that obscure the base spirit.
Cocktails range from $14 to $16, consistent with Midtown's cocktail-bar pricing tier. The menu rotates seasonally but typically includes drinks built around specific rums: a Daiquiri variant using a single aged rum as the anchor, a Pisco-rum hybrid, and seasonal drinks that incorporate fresh produce like passion fruit or mango when available. House specials change quarterly. Most drinks use fresh lime or lemon juice pressed to order, visible from the bar counter. The bar stocks rum from across the Caribbean—Jamaican, Trinidadian, and Cuban styles—rather than focusing on a single producer, which affects flavor profile noticeably across the menu. There is no call tier; all cocktails are built with the house spirits, priced uniformly.
Flamingo Tiki's specialization in rum distinguishes it from the broader Midtown cocktail scene. The Loaded Bowl, also in Midtown, emphasizes seasonal ingredients and craft in a more upscale setting but does not anchor its program to a specific spirit category. Goro Ramen + Izakaya, a few blocks away, serves spirits-forward cocktails but focuses on Japanese influences and techniques. For rum specifically, Flamingo Tiki is the only dedicated option in Midtown; the nearest competitor would be cocktail programs at Downtown bars like Cattlemen's Steakhouse, which offers rum cocktails as part of a broader menu rather than as a specialization. If you want to explore rum varieties with someone knowledgeable about blending and aging, Flamingo Tiki is the clearer choice. If you want a broader cocktail range or a larger food menu, The Loaded Bowl serves both.
The bar works well for rum enthusiasts, people interested in cocktail history (tiki drinks have a documented lineage back to the 1930s), and groups looking for a specific atmosphere without forced theatricality. The compact size means it gets crowded on Friday and Saturday nights after 10 p.m., so solo drinkers or pairs looking for conversation with bartenders should arrive earlier in the evening or on weeknights. It does not function as a nightclub or high-volume sports bar. There is no kitchen, so food is limited to snacks or what you bring; some patrons order from nearby restaurants and eat at the bar.
Enter from the street-level Midtown entrance. The bar has about a dozen seats at the counter and a few high-top tables; walk-ins are standard but waits of 20 to 30 minutes are common on Friday and Saturday after 9 p.m. The bartenders will ask about spirit preferences (light versus heavy rum, citrus-forward versus spirit-forward) if you are unsure what to order. Parking is street parking along the Midtown block; a small lot is shared with adjacent businesses.
Flamingo Tiki is typically open 5 p.m. to midnight Tuesday through Thursday, 5 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday and Saturday, and 5 p.m. to 11 p.m. Sunday. It is closed Mondays. Verify current hours before visiting, as seasonal adjustments occur. Street parking and shared-lot access are the primary options; paid lots are available one block away.
Flamingo Tiki fills the gap for serious rum cocktails in Midtown without requiring a journey Downtown, and its commitment to spirit quality over spectacle makes it a practical destination for drinkers who want to taste the difference between rums rather than chase novelty.
