Rental Assistance in Tulsa, OK

A 2-bedroom apartment in the Tulsa metro rents for about $1,145/month at Fair Market Rent. The metro has a population of 401,000 and is served by Public Housing Agencies operating under Oklahoma.

Population
401,000
2BR Fair Market Rent
$1,145/mo
State AMI (4-person)
$78,500

Fair Market Rents in Tulsa

HUD calculates a Fair Market Rent (FMR) for every metro area each year. It's set at roughly the 40th percentile of gross rent — the rent at which 40% of standard-quality apartments rent for less and 60% rent for more. FMR is the ceiling used to set the local Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher payment standard.

BedroomsFMR (gross rent)Tenant share at 30% AMI
Studio $710/mo $589/mo
1 bedroom $893/mo $589/mo
2 bedrooms $1,145/mo $589/mo
3 bedrooms $1,489/mo $589/mo
4 bedrooms $1,775/mo $589/mo

"Gross rent" includes the rent the landlord charges plus an allowance for tenant-paid utilities. The "tenant share" column shows what a household at 30% of the state AMI would owe under the Section 8 formula (30% of monthly adjusted income).

Public Housing Agencies serving Tulsa

PHAProgramsVouchersWaitlist
Tulsa OK Housing Authority Section 8 HCV, Public Housing 731 Closed (last update varies)

What rental assistance looks like in Tulsa

Renters in the Tulsa metro have access to the full federal program stack: Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers (administered by the local PHA), Public Housing operated by that same PHA, project-based Section 8 in private buildings under HUD contract, LIHTC properties (rents capped at 50–60% AMI without an income-based subsidy), and a smaller set of supportive housing programs for veterans (HUD-VASH), older adults (Section 202), and people with disabilities (Section 811).

Because Tulsa is part of a metro with a Fair Market 2-bedroom rent of $1,145/month, a Section 8 voucher in this area is worth substantially more than in a low-cost rural area in the same state. The PHA's Payment Standard typically falls between 90% and 110% of FMR, and HUD's Small Area FMR program — active in some metros — sets payment standards by ZIP code rather than the metro average, so high-opportunity neighborhoods get higher payment standards than the metro mean.

For background on what these programs do and who qualifies, start with Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher, then read the eligibility page and the Oklahoma state page.