Tuscany Village Apartments is a garden-style complex of roughly 200 units in the Midtown neighborhood, positioned between the affordability floor of efficiency rentals and the price ceiling of new construction luxury buildings across Oklahoma City.
The property sits on North Western Avenue, part of a residential cluster that includes other mid-sized complexes but lacks the mixed-use retail or significant elevation changes of newer developments downtown or in Bricktown. Units range from one to three bedrooms, arranged in two-story buildings with exterior corridors and parking directly outside. The complex has no elevator access, which matters if you are moving furniture or have mobility constraints.
Tuscany Village offers furnished and unfurnished floorplans. Rent typically ranges from $700 to $1,100 per month depending on unit size and lease term; call the leasing office to confirm current rates, as pricing shifts seasonally. A deposit equal to one month's rent is standard. Furnished units cost roughly 15 to 20 percent more than unfurnished options in the same size category.
Amenities include a pool, fitness center, and community room. Laundry facilities are on-site; most units do not have in-unit washer and dryer hookups, so verify before leasing if that is essential. The property allows pets with a monthly fee, usually $25 to $50 depending on size and breed restrictions.
The complex occupies middle ground. It is less expensive than Midtown's newer construction buildings like those near the pedestrian Automobile Alley corridor but typically higher-priced than older, smaller complexes further north on Western Avenue. Compared to brand-new apartment towers downtown near the Bricktown Canal, Tuscany Village costs $200 to $400 less per month for equivalent square footage, though you sacrifice rooftop lounges, concierge service, and proximity to restaurants and entertainment.
Within Midtown itself, Tuscany Village is older and lower-density than recently built mid-rises but offers more amenities and better finishes than converted apartment buildings from the 1970s and 1980s. If you want garden-style living with reasonable walkability to Midtown shops and restaurants without downtown pricing, this fits that niche. If your priority is the newest finishes or a rooftop view, look east toward the new construction near NW 23rd Street or south toward Bricktown.
The complex works well for renters who want a quieter neighborhood setting without commuting far from central Oklahoma City, particularly students or young professionals new to the city. The furnished option appeals to people relocating temporarily or for job contracts under two years. Month-to-month leases are available at a premium.
It is less suitable if you require in-unit laundry, need elevator access, have large dogs, or want walkable nightlife at your doorstep. The Western Avenue corridor is safe but quieter than Midtown proper; restaurants and bars require a short drive.
Contact the leasing office by phone or walk in during business hours to schedule a tour. Leasing staff will show you a model unit and discuss floor plan options, then walk through the available units or waitlisted floor plans if your preferred size is full. Bring your driver's license and be prepared to discuss income, employment history, and any co-signers. Background and credit checks are standard; approval typically takes 24 to 48 hours.
Most leases require proof of income (pay stubs or offer letter), a Social Security number, and a completed application. If you have poor credit, expect a larger deposit or a co-signer request. Move-in costs are usually deposit plus first month's rent, though move-in specials sometimes waive or reduce deposit amounts during slower rental periods.
The leasing office is typically open Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Saturday and Sunday by appointment; confirm current hours when you call, as staffing changes seasonally. The address is in the 3300 block of North Western Avenue, a few miles north of downtown. Parking is included with every lease; additional spaces are rarely needed on-site but available at extra cost.
Tuscany Village fills a practical role for renters seeking affordability and central location without the newness premium of downtown and midtown alternatives.
