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Fireplace and Stove Resources in Oklahoma

Find the fireplace that keeps Oklahoma homes warm—grid or no grid.

Wood, gas, pellet, and electric fireplace resources for every county and city in Oklahoma. Whether you're backstopping an OG&E or PSO outage after an ice storm or heating a Panhandle home through a hard winter, find the right unit and connect with a trusted local hearth dealer.

Start With Your Zip Code
Tell us a little about your project. We'll show you what works—and who can help.
Free Project Guide & Parts List Included · No Account Needed
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31
Local Dealers Listed
4
Fuels Covered
100%
Free for Homeowners
20+
Years in the Fireplace Industry
Which One Is Your Home?

Every Project Starts From One of These Five Situations

About Oklahoma

From humid Cross Timbers oak country to the windswept high plains of the Panhandle.

Most of Oklahoma sits in IECC climate zone 3A—hot summers, moderate winters, and humidity that shapes how homes are built and heated. But the state isn't uniform. Push out to the Panhandle around Boise City and Guymon and you cross into zone 4B, where heating degree days climb toward 5,000 and winter wind exposure starts to resemble Bismarck, North Dakota more than it does Oklahoma City, despite the shared latitude on a map. In between lies the Cross Timbers belt, a band of post oak, blackjack oak, and hickory forest running through the center of the state that still supplies a meaningful share of the wood burned in home stoves and inserts.

Oklahoma also has a heating reality most states don't: ice storms that can knock out power across whole counties for days at a time. Crews from OG&E, PSO, and the rural electric cooperatives that serve Panhandle and southeastern counties know these events well, and it's a big reason wood stoves and vented gas units get installed here as genuine backup heat, not just ambiance. This page is the starting point—enter your zip and fuel above, or browse by county or city below to find dealers, installation costs, and the products that make sense for your part of the state.

dad hugging son near linear fireplace, alternate frame
Recommended for Oklahoma

Top units for homes like yours.

Curated models that fit Oklahoma homes—sized for the local climate, with local dealers to help you with your project.

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See the exact models, prices, and dealers available near you—free, in about a minute.

How It Works

Three steps. No salesperson until you're ready.

1

Tell us about your project

Your zip code, your situation, and the fuel you're leaning toward—or let the answers point you to one.

2

See what's actually available

The brands dealers within 100 miles genuinely carry—real options, never a catalog mirage.

3

Get your dealer & Project Guide

A trusted local dealer, plus the free Project Guide & Parts List that names every component of the job.

Start With Your Zip Code
Tell us a little about your project. We'll show you what works—and who can help.
Free Project Guide & Parts List Included · No Account Needed
We share your details only with your matched dealer · Privacy

Frequently Asked Questions

Wood, gas, pellet, or electric—how do I choose?

Match the fuel to your life, not the other way around. Wood: lowest fuel cost and total power-outage independence, but you're hauling and stacking. Gas: press a button, set a thermostat, no maintenance to speak of. Pellet: wood economics with automatic feeding, in exchange for weekly cleaning and a need for electricity. Electric: plugs in anywhere with honest supplemental heat. Nobody regrets the fuel that fits how they actually live.

What is an in-home preview and do I need one?

It's a visit where a hearth professional measures your space, confirms the model you picked actually works in your home, and walks the specs—framing, gas line, venting, finish work—before anything is ordered. Some details you just can't know until you see the house. Never make a down payment without one; it's the single most-skipped step that burns buyers.

How much should I budget for a fireplace?

For an average home—covering the fireplace, the vent pipe, and basic installation—a budget between $3,900 and $5,500 gives you a lot of options across wood, gas, and pellet. By the time you add finish work, gas line, and electrical, the average complete installation lands between $5,000 and $12,000 all-in. In a remodel or new build, a good rule is to put about 2.5% of the total project cost toward the fireplace.

Can I install a fireplace myself?

If you're putting a fire in your house on purpose, it's best to work with an expert. Unless you're genuinely experienced in framing, gas line, vent pipe, and the national code on clearances to combustibles, have a professional do it—and ideally the same company that sells you the fireplace, so warranty, service, and liability all live under one roof.

Talk to a real shop

Every Hearth Dealer in Oklahoma

Preferred dealers are established local hearth shops from our partner network—real showrooms with real people to help you with your project. Every dealer listed is authorized by the manufacturers it represents and carries brands sold in this state.

Cherokee County 2 Dealers
Custer County 1 Dealer

Gas Equipment Company - Chandler

3055 E 8th St, Chandler, Ok, 74834, United States, Chandler
Oklahoma County 8 Dealers
Ottawa County 1 Dealer
Payne County 1 Dealer
Rogers County 3 Dealers
Tulsa County 6 Dealers

Sharps Pawn

911 Southwest Frank Phillips Blvd, Bartlesville
Ready to Start?

Find your fireplace in Oklahoma.

Tell us your zip code, fuel, and situation and we'll match you with a trusted local Oklahoma dealer, plus a free Project Guide & Parts List—the exact parts, including the vent kit, and the dealer we recommend for your project.

Find Your Fireplace →