Oklahoma Rental Network is a membership organization that brings together residential landlords, property managers, and rental housing advocates across Oklahoma City and the state, operating as a professional association rather than a full-service management company.
The network functions as a peer forum and advocacy group for property owners and managers who handle single-family homes, multifamily complexes, and small commercial rentals. Unlike property management firms that collect rent and handle day-to-day operations for a percentage of revenue, Oklahoma Rental Network offers members access to legal resources, industry education, networking events, and legislative advocacy focused on landlord interests. The organization serves roughly 1,500 members statewide, with active participation from Oklahoma City-area operators managing anywhere from five units to several hundred.
Members gain access to a legal hotline staffed by attorneys familiar with Oklahoma landlord-tenant law, allowing quick consultation on lease disputes, eviction procedures, and compliance questions. The network publishes model lease templates updated annually to reflect state law changes and provides members with samples for common situations: fixed-term residential leases, month-to-month agreements, pet policies, and addenda for smoking restrictions or utility arrangements.
Annual membership runs roughly $300 to $500 depending on membership tier (individual, company, or corporate). Members receive monthly newsletters covering regulatory changes, a member directory for peer referrals, and discounted registration at regional workshops covering topics like fair housing compliance, eviction procedures in Oklahoma County District Court, and handling security deposit disputes under Oklahoma Statutes Title 41. The organization also hosts a spring conference (typically April) and fall networking events in Oklahoma City with attendance fees separate from membership.
The hotline and template access justify membership for solo landlords managing 10 or more units. Smaller owners with fewer rentals may find individual consultations with a local real estate attorney more cost-effective.
Oklahoma Rental Network differs fundamentally from property management companies like Alesco Properties or the Goodwin Company, which charge 8 to 12 percent of monthly rent to handle tenant screening, rent collection, maintenance coordination, and lease enforcement. Those firms suit owners who want operational hands off; Oklahoma Rental Network suits owners who self-manage or partner with their own on-site staff and need legal backup and peer knowledge.
For landlords seeking legal resources without membership, the Oklahoma Bar Association offers lawyer referral services and can connect you to attorneys who specialize in residential landlord-tenant matters. Individual consultations typically cost $150 to $250 per hour. Oklahoma Rental Network's hotline access is cheaper if you have recurring questions or operate multiple properties.
Owner-operators focused primarily on learning often compare Oklahoma Rental Network to online platforms like the National Apartment Association's learning portal, which costs $300 annually and offers national courses on fair housing and property management systems. Oklahoma Rental Network's advantage is state-specific legal guidance and local networking; the NAA advantage is broader training depth.
Oklahoma Rental Network works well for independent landlords managing 5 to 100 units who want a legal safety net without hiring in-house counsel, Oklahoma City property managers seeking peer contacts and continuing education in fair housing law, and new rental property owners who need quick answers on lease wording or tenant issues before consulting an attorney. It also suits property management company owners operating in Oklahoma looking to stay updated on legislative changes that affect their business model.
It does not suit hands-off investors who delegate all property management to a licensed company, tenants seeking tenant rights information (the network explicitly serves landlord interests), or owners managing single rental properties who may find annual membership costs high relative to occasional use.
Most membership signup happens online through the Oklahoma Rental Network website or by attending a monthly meeting or annual conference. New members receive a membership packet with the current lease templates, contact info for the legal hotline, and the member directory. The legal hotline operates during business hours (typically 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays, though specific hours should be confirmed directly) and does not require appointments; you call with your question and speak to an attorney or receive a callback within one business day.
Attending a regional meeting or the annual conference is optional but recommended for first-time members seeking to meet other landlords and learn about current issues in the Oklahoma City rental market.
Oklahoma Rental Network maintains an office in Oklahoma City. Meetings and events occur at locations throughout the metro area; the annual conference rotates among Oklahoma City, Tulsa, and other regions. Membership applications and inquiries can be submitted through their website or by phone. Verification of current office hours and the legal hotline's exact availability is essential before relying on it for urgent questions.
Oklahoma Rental Network fills a gap between complete outsourcing and legal isolation, giving Oklahoma City landlords and managers a shared resource for compliance and peer guidance.
