Spring Creek Apartments is a 200-unit complex in northwest Oklahoma City offering two and three-bedroom floor plans at rents between $950 and $1,250 per month, positioned between the cheaper dispersed complexes along I-44 and the newer, pricier developments near Bricktown. The community sits on the edge of the Hefner neighborhood, roughly 3 miles north of the Lake Hefner park system and within a 10-minute drive of the Paseo Arts District.
Spring Creek is a standard garden-style apartment complex built in the 1980s, with buildings arranged around interior courtyards and surface parking. Units feature carpet, central air and heat, and kitchens with standard appliances. The complex does not allow pets. It is neither newly renovated luxury housing nor subsidized affordable housing; it serves people seeking reliable, basic rental housing without premium finishes or community amenities that would justify current market rents in Oklahoma City's tighter neighborhoods.
Two-bedroom units rent for $950 to $1,050 per month; three-bedroom units run $1,100 to $1,250 per month, depending on floor location and building age. Lease terms are typically 12 months. The standard deposit equals one month's rent. Water and trash are included in rent; tenants pay their own electric and gas. Verify current rates directly with the leasing office, as promotional discounts and market adjustments happen seasonally.
Spring Creek's pricing sits below newer complexes like those in the Plaza District or Bricktown, where similar floor plans cost $1,300 to $1,500 monthly. It costs slightly more than older, smaller complexes scattered throughout northwest Oklahoma City (The Fairways, Brittany Woods) but offers more modern maintenance and consistent availability. Unlike student-focused housing near the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center campus, Spring Creek does not impose occupancy limits based on enrollment. If you need the lowest possible rent and don't object to aging finishes, the dispersed I-44 corridor complexes offer $800 to $900 units. If you want newer construction with fitness centers and upgraded appliances and can spend an extra $300 to $400 monthly, Bricktown or Midtown options serve that market.
Spring Creek works for renters prioritizing stable, affordable housing over modern amenities or walkability. Families with children and people who need pets should look elsewhere (the no-pet policy is firm). Remote workers and people who prefer to stay home most of the time accept older furnishings more readily than people who entertain frequently or host guests. The location is car-dependent; there is no meaningful transit within walking distance, and the nearest grocery store is a 2-mile drive. If you work downtown or in the Midtown/Film Row corridor, the commute is 15 to 25 minutes depending on traffic and time of day.
Applicants must complete a rental application, submit a copy of a government-issued ID, provide two references (previous landlord or personal), and authorize a credit and background check. The complex requires proof of income (pay stubs or tax return) showing monthly income at least three times the monthly rent. Approval typically takes 3 to 5 business days. Once approved, you sign the lease, pay the deposit and first month's rent, and receive keys. The complex does not allow self-move-in outside posted office hours.
The leasing office is open Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., and Saturday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.; it is closed Sundays. The address is 3001 NW 63rd Street. Surface parking is provided at no additional charge; each two-bedroom unit is assigned one space, and three-bedroom units receive two spaces. There is no covered parking. Street address verification matters because mail delivery can lag at the complex. Package theft is an intermittent issue, particularly around the holidays; the leasing office does not hold packages long-term.
Spring Creek fills a practical role in Oklahoma City's rental market: it offers decent housing at a price point that makes sense for people who earn between $30,000 and $50,000 annually and need to move quickly without sacrificing reliability for a bargain.
