Titan Martial Arts is a karate and kickboxing school in Oklahoma City that serves children as young as four alongside teen and adult students, operating with a belt ranking system and structured membership pricing rather than drop-in classes.
The school teaches traditional karate and kickboxing across separate class tracks, with instructors who hold black belt certifications. Students progress through a colored-belt system (typically white through black), attending scheduled classes rather than open-gym formats. The facility caters to families seeking structured instruction in a single location rather than cross-training at multiple studios.
Karate instruction follows a standard belt progression: white, yellow, orange, green, blue, purple, brown, and black. Kickboxing classes use a similar advancement model, allowing students to track measurable progress. Little Ninja classes start at age four and focus on basic coordination and discipline through games; youth classes (ages 5-12) emphasize technique and form; and teen/adult classes accommodate ages 13 and up. The belt testing schedule typically occurs every two to three months, though you should confirm exact testing dates when enrolling.
Monthly membership for one discipline costs $70 to $90 depending on class frequency; multi-discipline packages (karate plus kickboxing) run $120 to $150 monthly. Most memberships require a one-time enrollment fee of $25 to $40. Belt testing fees, assessed at promotion time, typically range from $25 to $50. Trial classes are available; confirm current pricing directly with the school, as membership structures occasionally adjust.
Oklahoma City has several martial arts alternatives. Gracie Jiu-Jitsu schools, such as those operating in the metro area, focus exclusively on grappling and ground fighting, making them better for students interested in competition-level submission techniques or MMA preparation. Traditional karate-only studios may offer deeper kata instruction but typically lack the kickboxing crossover. Titan's dual-discipline setup appeals to parents wanting their children to explore both striking arts without switching facilities. For adults seeking purely fitness-driven kickboxing without belt progression, standalone boxing gyms or CrossFit boxes offer different value propositions. Choose Titan if you want structured karate progression with the option to add striking variety; choose a Gracie academy if grappling or MMA is your focus; choose a traditional karate dojo if you prefer single-discipline depth.
Titan works well for families with children needing structure and measurable achievement markers (the belt system), for adults returning to martial arts after a break, and for anyone wanting to sample two striking disciplines without committing to separate memberships. It is less suited to beginners seeking only casual fitness (membership contracts and belt testing expectations create longer-term commitment), to serious competitors planning tournament-level advancement in a single art, or to students with limited schedules who need unlimited drop-in access.
Call or visit the facility to book a trial class. Bring comfortable workout clothes and be ready to observe or participate in a 45-minute to 60-minute session alongside age-matched students. Instructors will assess your or your child's starting level and discuss which belt rank you would begin at (typically white for absolute beginners). Enrollment paperwork and a discussion of membership options follow the trial. Expect to pay the one-time enrollment fee at signup.
Titan Martial Arts operates weekday evenings (typically 3 p.m. to 8 p.m., with Saturday morning classes available). Confirm current hours before your first visit, as youth and adult class schedules sometimes shift seasonally. Parking is available on-site. The school requests that students arrive 10 to 15 minutes before class to change and prepare. Most locations provide locker space for personal belongings during instruction.
Titan fills a practical niche in Oklahoma City's martial arts landscape: it removes the friction of splitting time and tuition between two schools, making it accessible for busy families and adults who want structured progression without overcomplicating their schedules.
