Fairfax Apartments is a mid-sized residential community in the Uptown/Midtown corridor of Oklahoma City, positioned between luxury high-rises and budget complexes for renters seeking modest finishes and walkable proximity to retail and dining without premium pricing.
Fairfax Apartments operates as a garden-style complex with surface parking, offering one- and two-bedroom floor plans in a neighborhood that has steadily attracted young professionals and families over the past five years. The property sits roughly two blocks east of the Uptown shopping district and within walking distance of restaurants and coffee shops along 23rd Street, a meaningful advantage if you work or spend time in that corridor. The complex itself is unremarkable from a design perspective—standard construction, simple landscaping—which translates to straightforward maintenance and predictable day-to-day living rather than amenity-heavy features.
Fairfax rents one-bedroom units starting around $850 to $950 per month and two-bedroom units from $1,050 to $1,200, though these figures shift seasonally and by lease length; confirm current pricing directly with the office. A standard lease runs 12 months, and the complex typically requires first month's rent, last month's rent, and a security deposit equal to one month's rent at signing. Utility costs are split between what the property covers (trash, water, sewer) and what tenants pay separately (electricity, gas, internet), a setup common across Oklahoma City apartments in this price tier but worth clarifying before committing.
Fairfax occupies the middle ground between the Grandstand Lofts (higher-end conversion properties with steel finishes and fitness centers closer to $1,400 for a one-bedroom) and more basic complexes like those found in nearby residential blocks that undercut Fairfax by $100 to $150 monthly but lack the location advantage. If you prioritize walkability to Uptown shops and restaurants and are willing to accept older finishes, Fairfax delivers that trade-off clearly. If you need modern appliances, managed fitness facilities, or rooftop amenities, the Grandstand or similar newer developments justify their premium. For renters indifferent to neighborhood retail and focused on lowest cost, the older garden complexes scattered through nearby residential streets offer savings Fairfax cannot match.
Fairfax suits renters employed near Uptown, those who enjoy walking to dinner and coffee, and anyone comfortable with 1990s-era apartment living in exchange for location and moderate pricing. Tenants with vehicles will not struggle; surface parking is straightforward and free. The complex does not appeal to renters seeking luxury finishes, corporate housing with high-touch service, or pet owners with large dogs, as the property maintains standard weight and breed restrictions. Young families sometimes choose Fairfax for the neighborhood's schools and retail walkability, though the complex itself has no dedicated family programming.
Arriving at Fairfax, you'll check in at a small leasing office near the main entrance. Leasing agents will walk available floor plans, show you the unit type (not always the exact unit you'd occupy), review the lease terms, and run a background and credit check if you decide to move forward that day. The process typically takes 45 minutes to an hour. Bring a photo ID, proof of income (recent pay stubs or tax return), and be prepared to discuss employment and references; the complex uses standard screening for Oklahoma City apartment complexes and rarely deviates. If you have recent evictions or serious credit damage, expect denial or a requirement to pay higher deposits.
The leasing office is generally open weekdays 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Saturdays 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.; verify current hours before visiting, as staffing sometimes shifts. Parking is surface lot with one space included per lease; additional spaces cost roughly $20 to $30 monthly. The complex sits two blocks from the Uptown district along a street with moderate foot traffic and no significant safety concerns, though lighting in the parking areas is basic. Public transit via OCTA bus routes covers Uptown but is not frequent; you'll likely want a vehicle for commutes outside the immediate neighborhood.
Fairfax earns inclusion as a straightforward, locally realistic option for renters working or studying Uptown who want neighborhood access without spending premium rent or accepting distant, car-dependent locations.
