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HomeCost GuidesHandyman Cost › Oklahoma City, OK

🔨 Cost Guide · Oklahoma City, OK

Average Handyman Cost in Oklahoma City, OK (2026)

A handyman in Oklahoma City charges $48/hour for a standard service call — that's 13% below the US median of $55/hour. The differential reflects the OK cost-of-living composite of 86.8 (US average = 100) applied to BLS OEWS national mean wage data for SOC 47-2061.

Handyman project costs in Oklahoma City, OK

ProjectTimeTypical costRange
Standard hourly rate (1-person crew) per hour $48 $39 – $57
TV mount install (drywall, fixed mount) 60–90 min $93 $77 – $112
Drywall patch (one fist-sized hole) 2 hours + cure $122 $100 – $146
Interior door rehang or hardware replace 1–2 hours $102 $84 – $122
Light fixture or ceiling-fan swap (existing wiring) 1–2 hours $89 $73 – $107
Flat-pack furniture assembly (avg piece) 1.5–3 hours $96 $78 – $115
Single room repaint (10×12, 2 coats) 1 day $478 $392 – $573
Driveway + walkway pressure wash 2–4 hours $165 $135 – $198
Whole-house caulk + seal refresh 4–6 hours $230 $189 – $276

Sources: BLS OEWS May 2024 (SOC 47-2061), MERIC State Cost of Living Index 86.8 for OK, NAHB Construction Cost Survey 2024.

How Oklahoma City compares

At an effective contractor rate of $48/hour, Oklahoma City sits meaningfully below the national median for handyman work. Homeowners here will see lower-than-average prices on labor-intensive jobs (re-pipes, panel upgrades, full system replacements) where labor is the bulk of the cost. Materials-heavy jobs (water-heater swaps, furnace replacements, large appliance installs) will track somewhat below the national figure because regional materials inflation in OK runs about 13% below the US benchmark.

What the work involves

A handyman handles small to mid-size jobs that don't cross into licensed-trade territory: drywall repair and patching, painting, fixture replacement (where existing wiring is in place), light carpentry, furniture assembly, door rehang, weatherstripping, caulking, hardware installs, mounting heavy items into studs, pressure washing, and basic deck or fence repair. State rules vary on the dollar threshold above which a general contractor license is required — in California it's $500 (labor + materials per project), in Texas there is no statewide license but cities can require permits, and in Florida it's $1,000.

Six questions to ask any handyman in OK

  1. For my state, is this job above the threshold that requires a contractor license?
  2. Do you carry liability insurance? (Even small jobs can do five-figure damage.)
  3. How do you price — hourly with a minimum, or flat per task?
  4. Do you bring your own materials or do I supply them?
  5. What's your guarantee if a repair fails within a few weeks?
  6. How are change-orders handled if the job opens up something bigger?
A "handyman" willing to do major plumbing, electrical, or HVAC work without a license — that's how houses end up with insurance-disqualifying defects.

Featured handymans in Oklahoma City

Lone Star Mr. Fix

📍 9007 Willow Ct, Oklahoma City, OK 73102
★ 4.9 / 5 · 65 reviews · 3 yrs
✓ Licensed 24/7

Atlantic Repair

📍 8818 Cedar Pl, Oklahoma City, OK 73104
★ 4.1 / 5 · 219 reviews · 34 yrs
✓ Licensed 24/7

Oklahoma City Renovation

📍 5196 Willow Pkwy, Oklahoma City, OK 73103
★ 4.0 / 5 · 273 reviews · 8 yrs
✓ Licensed

Lee Renovation

📍 5655 Aspen Way, Oklahoma City, OK 73104
★ 3.6 / 5 · 266 reviews · 3 yrs
✓ Licensed 24/7

Oklahoma City Property Services

📍 4045 Madison Way, Oklahoma City, OK 73103
★ 4.6 / 5 · 26 reviews · 35 yrs
✓ Licensed

See all Handymans in Oklahoma City →

By ZIP code in Oklahoma City

Seasonal handyman checklist

Spring

  • Inspect the roof from the ground with binoculars: missing shingles, lifted flashing, or sagging gutters all need attention before storm season.
  • Clean gutters and downspouts; verify water exits at least 4 feet from the foundation.
  • Re-caulk exterior windows and doors where the old bead has cracked or pulled away.
  • Pressure wash siding, decks, and walkways; reseal wood decks every 2–3 years.
  • Touch-up exterior paint before summer UV intensifies.

Fall

  • Clean gutters again after leaf-drop; clogged gutters in winter cause ice dams and interior damage.
  • Caulk and weatherstrip doors and windows; the average home loses 30% of conditioned air through gaps.
  • Drain and store outdoor hoses; cover hose bibs.
  • Inspect the chimney and have it swept if you burn wood; clear creosote is the leading cause of chimney fires.
  • Stage firewood at least 30 feet from the house.

Winter

  • Reverse ceiling fans to clockwise (low) to push warm air down.
  • Test all door hardware and locks now; lubrication issues are easier to fix before a sub-freezing morning.
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