Elections will be held in the U.S. state of Oklahoma throughout 2025 to elect officers of some municipal governments. Special elections for state and federal positions will also take place if vacancies arise.
No regularly scheduled state legislative elections will take place in Oklahoma. There are three special elections scheduled in the state caused by vacancies in the Oklahoma State Legislature.
A special election for Senate District 8 took place on May 13, 2025. The Republican primary was held on March 4 with a runoff on April 1, while the sole Democratic candidate did not face a primary. Senate District 8 represents the counties of McIntosh, Okfuskee, Okmulgee, as well as portions of Creek and Muskogee. The vacancy was caused by the resignation of Republican senator Roger Thompson in November 2024.
A special election for House District 71 took place on June 10, 2025. The primaries were held on April 1 with a runoff for the Republican nomination scheduled on May 13. The district covers a portion of the city of Tulsa. The vacancy was caused by the resignation of Democratic representative Amanda Swope in January 2025. Four Democrats competed in an unusually expensive primary to represent the deeply-blue district. Amanda Clinton won the primary in the first round and easily won the general election.
A special election for House District 74 is scheduled to take place on June 10, 2025. The Republican primary was held on April 1 with a runoff scheduled for May 13, while the sole Democratic candidate did not face a primary. House District 74 represents portions of the counties of Rogers and Tulsa. The vacancy was caused by the resignation of Republican representative Mark Vancuren in January 2025.
A special election for House District 97 is scheduled to take place in 2025. As only two Democratic candidates filed to run for the seat, the Democratic primary election, scheduled for June 10, 2025, will decide the winner of the election. House District 97 represents a portion of Oklahoma County. The vacancy was caused by the resignation of Democratic representative Jason Lowe in April 2025.
Municipal elections in Oklahoma are nonpartisan, while county elections are partisan.
In Oklahoma City, the state's largest city and its capital, half of the city council was up for election. The general election was on February 11, with runoffs taking place on April 1.
In Norman, the state's third largest city, its mayor and odd-numbered city council districts are up for election. The general election took place on February 11. Incumbent Ward 7 councilmember Tyler Holman defeated incumbent mayor Larry Heikkila with 61.1 percent of the vote.
A special election for the Oklahoma County Commission District 1 took place on April 1, with the Democratic primary on February 11. The vacancy was caused by the resignation of Democratic commissioner Carrie Blumert. Democratic nominee Jason Lowe defeated independent candidate Jed Green with 85.2 percent of the vote.
On April 1, 2025, Roger Dale Merrill was elected mayor of Beggs in Okmulgee County with 82.1 percent of the vote, making him the first mayor in the state of Oklahoma to be a member of the Libertarian Party.