The headline at Oklahoma Law is the price: $19,758 a year, around $119,274 all-in, modest by legal-education standards. Do not let the modest sticker end the analysis. The same LSAT leverage that moves six figures at premium schools moves real money here as well, and on a smaller base, every discounted dollar changes the debt math faster.
Line itemFigureNoteAnnual tuition$19,758Published rate, pre-awardThree-year tuition$59,274Sticker × 3Living expenses~$20,000 / yrNorman, OklahomaThree-year cost of attendance~$119,274The real all-in numberMerit money opensLSAT 156+Where awards beginIn-state rateLower, verifyPublic-school advantage
The honest answer is a range, and your LSAT picks the spot in it. Awards open above an LSAT of 156 and scale from there; the published price holds only for applicants who gave the school no reason to move it.
Understand what a scholarship is from Oklahoma Law’s side of the table: a purchase. The school buys the credentials its ranking requires, and the budget flows to applicants whose numbers defend the published medians. That is why awards cluster above the median, why they grow with distance from it, and why a written offer from a peer school changes the conversation, it puts a market price on you. Always negotiate in writing.
One more lever at Oklahoma Law: residency. As a public institution, its in-state rate can sit meaningfully below the published figure, verify the current resident tuition directly, because for in-state applicants the comparison against private alternatives changes completely, and for out-of-state applicants, some states make residency achievable by the second year.
Withheld Tip: scholarship money is committed on a calendar, not a queue. By the time late applicants are admitted, the budget that would have funded them is already promised to the November pool. Early application is not diligence at this tier, it is, quite literally, money.
Model it before you sign anything: scholarship-adjusted annual cost is $19,758 minus your award, plus roughly $20,000 in living expenses, times three, plus interest accruing from day one. Set that figure against the incomes the degree actually produces: regional firms ($65 to 130K), government ($55 to 90K), and BigLaw ($215K) for the slice of any class that lands it. At sticker, this degree costs about 1.2 years of a regional first-year salary, the single most clarifying ratio in the decision. Running this arithmetic after choosing a school is not financial planning, it is accounting for a decision already made.
Non-negotiable: the debt model runs on the middle of the income distribution. Building it on the BigLaw number is how applicants talk themselves into prices the actual job market will not service. And if public interest is the path, treat LRAP as a document to read, not a rumor to rely on, terms vary and shift.
The published rate is $19,758; the realistic annual budget is closer to $40,000 with living expenses. What you pay depends on the award that open above an LSAT of 156, which is to say, mostly on your LSAT.
In practice, yes, documented peer offers move awards. Send the competing letter, ask directly for reconsideration, and keep everything in writing. Applicants who never ask reliably pay the most.
At sticker, only for specific career paths; at a strong discount, the math changes completely. The honest answer depends on your award and your target market, run the debt model above, then read the school’s employment outcomes alongside it.
The most expensive sentence in legal education is “the price is the price.” It never is. Oklahoma Law sells the same seat at different numbers depending on what the applicant brings to the table, so bring something: points above the median, written competition, and an early file. The discount is earned months before the offer arrives.