Redneck Yacht Club is a two-floor dance club on Reno Avenue in Midtown that mixes country and hip-hop with a split-venue approach: the main floor runs country line dancing and two-step, while a second space dedicates itself to hip-hop and rap. The club draws a mixed crowd of students, young professionals, and out-of-towners looking for the rare setup that lets you choose your music without changing venues.
The club operates as a country bar first with a dance component, then pivots to hip-hop in a separated room. The design avoids the common problem of blended playlists that satisfy no one: country dancers and hip-hop crowds occupy different floors, each with its own sound system and bar. The vibe skews casual and social rather than ultra-high-energy; the crowd tends toward people learning line dances or talking in groups between songs rather than wall-to-wall dancing.
Country dominates the main floor with a mix of current hits and classics suitable for line dancing. Hip-hop runs in the secondary space with both current tracks and throwbacks. Cover charges run $5 to $10 depending on the night and whether a special event is scheduled; Friday and Saturday nights sit at the higher end. The club does not employ resident DJs in the traditional sense; instead, a rotating playlist and occasional live country bands fill the country floor. No table service is standard, and no table minimums are enforced for most nights.
Redneck Yacht Club stands apart from The Loaded Bowl (a country bar on Classen Boulevard) because it explicitly separates the country and hip-hop experience, while The Loaded Bowl runs a single mixed space. If you want pure country line dancing without hip-hop bleeding into the sound, Redneck Yacht Club's dedicated floor wins. For pure hip-hop and R&B in a nightclub setting, Harrah's Casino in nearby Norman offers a larger dance floor and bigger-name touring acts, but charges higher covers and draws an older crowd. Redneck Yacht Club appeals to those who want low entry cost and social dancing; Harrah's suits people prioritizing big production and DJs with regional or national draws.
Compared to The Box (a live-music venue on Main Street that programs country nights), Redneck Yacht Club stays strictly dance-focused and requires no ticket purchase unless a band is booked. The Box works better if you want a sit-down show with opening acts. Redneck Yacht Club works if you want to dance immediately without waiting between songs.
This club works for people learning country line dances, groups of friends splitting a low cover charge, and anyone wanting to switch between country and hip-hop within the same roof. It suits tourists and locals who want a casual scene without velvet ropes or dressy requirements. It does not work for people seeking craft cocktails (the bar pours well drinks and domestic beers), live bands every night, or a high-energy electronic dance music environment. It also does not accommodate people with hearing sensitivity; both floors maintain loud volumes typical of dance clubs.
Arrive before 10 p.m. on a Friday or Saturday to avoid the thickest crowd. Pay cover at the door and go straight to the main floor if country dancing interests you, or head upstairs for hip-hop. Both floors have separate bars. The country side is intuitive if you know any line dances; staff and regulars will often wave newcomers into formations. The hip-hop space plays more like a standard dance floor. Expect to stand and mingle more than sit, unless you arrive very early. No dress code is enforced, though jeans and a t-shirt blend in better than formal wear.
Redneck Yacht Club opens Thursday through Saturday from 9 p.m. to 2 a.m. on most weeks; confirm hours before visiting, as special events occasionally shift timing. Street parking surrounds the building on Reno Avenue; a small lot sits immediately behind the structure. The venue is accessible from downtown Oklahoma City via a five-minute drive or taxi ride.
Redneck Yacht Club fills a specific niche in Oklahoma City's nightlife by giving country and hip-hop dancers a single destination without forcing compromise. The low cover and operational simplicity make it a reliable choice when you want to move without planning ahead.
