Camelot Pub is a no-frills dive bar in Oklahoma City that runs on cash, cheap well drinks, and a crowd that treats the place like their living room. No craft cocktails, no themed decor beyond neon beer signs, no pretense. The bar occupies a straightforward corner space and draws regulars who spend entire afternoons nursing drinks that cost less than a coffee elsewhere in the city.
This is a neighborhood bar designed for people who want alcohol, conversation, and minimal interruption from slick marketing. The interior is dim, with standard bar stools, wood paneling, and a jukebox loaded with classic rock and country. Pool tables occupy the back. The crowd skews toward locals in their 40s and up, though younger regulars appear on weekends. There's no food menu, no table service, and no events calendar. You order at the bar, you pay cash, and you stay as long as you want without feeling watched.
Well drinks run $3 to $4, making Camelot one of the cheaper drink destinations in Oklahoma City. Beer by the can or bottle ranges from $2.50 to $4 depending on the brand. These prices do not change significantly, though it's worth confirming on any given night since cash-only bars sometimes adjust without notice. There is no food service, so plan to eat elsewhere if you're settling in for an extended session.
Camelot differs from The Loaded Bowl, another cash-preferred dive in midtown, which has more of a college-bar energy and cheaper specials on certain nights but draws a younger crowd. Camelot also contrasts with Ted's Cafe & Cantina's bar section, which mixes dive-bar pricing with a full restaurant operation and attracts families alongside drinkers. If you want solitude and low cost, Camelot wins. If you want atmosphere beyond neon and wood, or if you want to eat, look elsewhere. For those specifically seeking a room where the jukebox matters and nobody cares how long you stay, Camelot fits better than most midtown or downtown options that have shifted toward cocktail culture in recent years.
This bar works for people who want to drink cheap, talk, and leave without small talk with bartenders trained to upsell. It suits evening and weekend regulars more than tourists or first-timers. It does not suit groups looking for Instagram moments, anyone who prefers beer variety or craft options, or those expecting food. If your goal is anonymity and affordability, you are in the right place. If you want the bartender to know your name after one visit or if you need Wi-Fi for work, this is not your bar.
Walk in, find a stool, order a well drink or beer by pointing at what you want behind the counter. Pay cash. The bartender will not make small talk unless you initiate it. The jukebox will be playing. If you want a pool game, quarters go in the back table. If you want to sit quietly, nobody will bother you. It is efficient and low-key by design.
Camelot operates in the afternoon and evening most days, though hours vary seasonally and may shift without notice due to staffing. Call ahead or arrive early if you are making a special trip. Parking is available on the street or in nearby lots. The location is accessible by car from downtown or midtown Oklahoma City within 10 to 15 minutes depending on traffic. Public transit is limited in this area, so a car is practical. Verify current hours before visiting, as smaller cash-only bars sometimes close earlier than posted.
Camelot Pub holds its place in Oklahoma City's dive bar landscape precisely because it refuses to evolve. That consistency is its value.
