Boys & Girls Clubs of Oklahoma County
OKC Metro
Who qualifies
Open to school-age youth in Oklahoma County; see official site for current membership details.
How to apply
Use the Join a Club page on the website or call the main office.
The Boys and Girls Clubs of Oklahoma County give school-age youth a safe, supervised place to spend after-school hours and summer days. Programming blends academic help with sports, arts, and career preparation in a welcoming setting.
What it offers
- Academic enrichment and tutoring to support success in school
- College and career readiness activities for older youth
- Sports, arts, and STEAM programs that build skills and confidence
- Mentoring within a supervised, welcoming environment
- Summer programming that keeps kids engaged when school is out
Who it is for
Membership is open to school-age young people across Oklahoma County. The clubs are a strong fit for working parents who want their children in a positive, structured setting during the hours when school is out and supervision can be hard to arrange. Children who benefit from extra academic help, or who thrive with sports and creative activities, find a place here alongside caring staff and mentors. Current membership details are on the official site.
Getting started
Families sign up through the Join a Club page on the website or by calling the main office. Staff explain membership, describe the programs at each club, and help match a child to a nearby location that fits the family routine. Signing up is designed to be simple so children can start taking part without a long wait, and parents can ask about the daily schedule before enrolling.
What a typical day looks like
A typical afternoon at the club blends structure with room to explore. Children arrive after school to a supervised setting where academic enrichment and tutoring share the schedule with sports, arts, and STEAM activities, so a day can move from homework help to a creative project to time in the gym.
For older youth, the day may include college and career readiness alongside mentoring from caring staff. Parents can ask about the daily schedule before enrolling, which helps set expectations for how their child will spend the hours between the end of school and pickup.
Because the clubs run both after school and through the summer, they can cover a family’s supervision needs across the year, and siblings can often attend the same location. It helps to ask about the hours, what a child should bring, and any membership details before the first day, so a new member settles in without surprises and parents know the routine. Parents who are comparing options can visit a club, meet the staff, and see the space before enrolling, which often makes it easier to feel confident about where a child will spend those hours.
To recap eligibility, membership is open to school-age young people across Oklahoma County, and siblings can often join the same club. Signing up follows one of two steps: a family uses the Join a Club page on the website, or calls the main office at (405) 521-9292, where staff explain membership, describe each club’s programs, and help match a child to a nearby location. Any current membership details are confirmed at that first contact or on the official site. The main office is also the place to ask when it is reachable during regular business hours and what the daily after-school and summer schedules look like before a child starts.
Frequently asked questions
Who can join?
Membership is open to school-age young people across Oklahoma County. Current membership details are on the official site.
What activities are offered?
Academic enrichment, tutoring, college and career prep, sports, arts, STEAM activities, and mentoring in a supervised setting. A day blends learning and play.
How do I sign up?
Use the Join a Club page on the website or call the main office. Staff will help match a child to a nearby location that fits your routine.
Is there summer programming?
Yes. Summer programming keeps kids engaged in a supervised setting once school is out for the break. That helps working parents cover the year.