The electrical code edition in force in Oklahoma, with its effective date, the adopting authority and an official link. Factual adoption data only — confirm with your local AHJ.
NEC / NFPA 70 in force in Oklahoma
2023
OUBCC adopts the 2023 NEC (NFPA 70) as the statewide minimum electrical code with state amendments, effective 2024-09-14, superseding the 2020 edition. The Construction Industries Board handles electrical licensing; local AHJs may further amend.
State/province adoption is the baseline. Your local building department may amend it or enforce a different edition — always confirm with the authority having jurisdiction (AHJ) before you design, bid or pull a permit.
Oklahoma has adopted 2023 (NEC / NFPA 70) with an effective date of September 14, 2024. The body responsible for adoption and enforcement is Oklahoma Uniform Building Code Commission (OUBCC). This is the jurisdiction-wide baseline — your local building department may amend it or enforce a different edition, so confirm with the authority having jurisdiction before you design, bid or pull a permit.
OUBCC adopts the 2023 NEC (NFPA 70) as the statewide minimum electrical code with state amendments, effective 2024-09-14, superseding the 2020 edition. The Construction Industries Board handles electrical licensing; local AHJs may further amend. The official code text is published by the standards body and is free to read online — use the official link above to read it. We link and cite the code; we do not reproduce it.
Oklahoma has adopted 2023 (NEC / NFPA 70), effective September 14, 2024. The adopting authority is Oklahoma Uniform Building Code Commission (OUBCC). Verified June 28, 2026.
OUBCC adopts the 2023 NEC (NFPA 70) as the statewide minimum electrical code with state amendments, effective 2024-09-14, superseding the 2020 edition. The Construction Industries Board handles electrical licensing; local AHJs may further amend.
It is the specific edition of a model code (for example the 2023 NEC, the 2021 IBC, or CSA C22.1:24) that a state or province has legally adopted and currently enforces. Codes are republished on roughly three-year cycles, and each jurisdiction adopts a new edition on its own schedule — often with amendments — so the edition in force varies by place and by discipline.
Not always. Many jurisdictions set a statewide or provincial baseline edition, but local building departments (the authority having jurisdiction, or AHJ) can amend it or enforce a different edition. Some states leave most adoption to local jurisdictions, and a few large cities such as Chicago and New York City run their own codes. Always confirm with your AHJ.
In the United States: the NEC (NFPA 70) for electrical, the ICC I-Codes (IBC/IRC) for building, the UPC (IAPMO) or IPC (ICC) for plumbing, the IMC/UMC for mechanical, the IFGC/NFPA 54 for fuel gas, and the IFC/NFPA 1 for fire. In Canada: the Canadian Electrical Code (CSA C22.1), the National Building, Plumbing and Fire Codes of Canada and their provincial editions, and CSA B149.1 for gas.
NFPA offers free read-only online access to many of its standards including the NEC, and the ICC publishes its I-Codes through a free online reading room. Canadian codes are typically published by CSA Group or the National Research Council and may require purchase or membership. Each result links to the official source.
Trade codes are copyrighted by their standards bodies (NFPA, ICC, IAPMO, CSA). This directory publishes only factual adoption data — which edition is in force, when it took effect, who the authority is, whether it is amended, and where to read it officially — and links you to the official source for the code text itself.
This record was verified against Oklahoma Uniform Building Code Commission (OUBCC) and the relevant standards body on June 28, 2026, and is next due for review by December 31, 2026. We publish factual adoption data only — never code text.
Last reviewed June 28, 2026. Estimates are indicative — verify against current product specs and local requirements before ordering.
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