A privately held dealer operating since the 1980s, Jensen Tractor Ranch stocks new and used equipment ranging from compact tractors to utility vehicles and, in a secondary capacity, supplies mobility and accessibility equipment for residential and light commercial use. The business occupies a retail lot and service facility outside central Oklahoma City, serving rural and suburban customers across central Oklahoma who need both agricultural machinery and personal mobility aids.
Jensen Tractor Ranch operates as a dual-purpose equipment dealer. The primary business is tractor and farm equipment sales, which generates foot traffic and service demand that supports an adjacent mobility equipment section. The mobility side includes walkers, canes, wheelchairs, and scooters; the dealership stocks both new and refurbished units. This arrangement reflects the rural Oklahoma market, where a single customer may need a small tractor one year and a mobility device the next. The setup is fundamentally different from a dedicated medical equipment supplier, where focus is narrower and inventory is often ordered-to-fit rather than stocked for immediate walk-in purchase.
Mobility inventory includes basic aluminum walkers (typically $60 to $150 new), folding canes ($25 to $80), manual wheelchairs (starting around $400 for basic models, $800 to $1,500 for better construction), and motorized scooters ($1,500 to $3,500 depending on range and weight capacity). Refurbished scooters, when available, sell for 20 to 40 percent less than new units. Pricing reflects retail stocking rather than medical insurance billing; the dealership accepts cash and card but does not directly bill Medicare or private insurers. For insured customers, the equipment can be purchased and submitted for reimbursement claim, a process that falls on the buyer.
Walk-in availability is a core advantage. Customers can see and sit in equipment the same day, which medical supply chains (often warehouse-based with 5 to 7-day lead times) do not offer. The trade-off is that specialized items such as standing frames, tilt-in-space wheelchairs, or custom seat cushions are not stocked and would require order through a regional supplier or direct manufacturer. Confirm current inventory by phone before making the trip for a specific item.
Oklahoma City's dedicated medical equipment market includes regional suppliers such as Amedisys Medical Equipment (multiple locations, insurance billing, ordered inventory) and independent pharmacies with mobility corners (limited selection, faster for small purchases like canes or compression socks). National chains like Walgreens and CVS stock basic items but at higher margins and with less expertise.
Jensen Tractor Ranch wins for walk-in availability of mid-range equipment and for customers who value being able to inspect and try scooters or wheelchairs in person before paying. It suits rural buyers and those without insurance who need immediate access. It loses for specialized adaptive equipment, for customers whose insurance requires a medical equipment supplier, and for ongoing service contracts or rental programs common at dedicated suppliers. If you have a specific mobility need covered under Medicare, Amedisys or a hospital-affiliated supplier should be your first call; if you need a scooter or wheelchair today and can pay out of pocket, Jensen is faster.
Jensen serves rural and suburban Oklahoma City residents, farmers, and equipment operators who already know the dealership or trust personal referral. It suits customers without active insurance who can pay cash. It works for straightforward needs like a basic scooter, cane, or walker for temporary use (post-surgery recovery, short-term mobility loss).
It does not suit customers whose equipment must be billed to Medicare, Medicaid, or private insurance, as the dealership does not handle that paperwork. It does not work for specialized seating, custom orthotics, or ongoing professional fitting. Patients referred by occupational or physical therapists may need equipment that comes with clinical consultation, which a tractor dealer cannot provide.
Walk in during posted hours, bring a valid ID and payment method (cash, debit, or credit card). A staff member will ask what mobility problem you are addressing and, if relevant, your weight and height. For a scooter or wheelchair, expect to sit in or briefly operate a model. Delivery and setup are available for additional cost; confirm before purchase. Do not expect insurance verification, prior authorization, or a multi-appointment fitting process. Transactions are typically complete within 30 to 60 minutes.
Verify hours before visiting; rural equipment dealerships sometimes adjust seasonally or close midday. The lot is outside central Oklahoma City with ample free parking suitable for vehicles with mobility equipment. Nearest public transit is limited; this is a car-required destination. If you cannot drive, arrange a friend or family member with a vehicle, as the dealership does not offer public delivery or rental.
Jensen Tractor Ranch fills a practical gap in Oklahoma City's equipment market by offering same-day cash purchases and hands-on inspection where national suppliers and insurance-dependent providers cannot compete. For buyers without insurance and without specialized needs, it remains a faster and cheaper entry point than ordering from a medical supply chain.
