Oklahoma disaster history
County pages for Oklahoma, ordered by declaration count and backed by the FEMA datasets described in the brief.
Counties with the most declarations
These are the county pages most likely to match long-tail “county + disaster history” searches.
Latest county-level events
DIBBLE CREEK FIRE
BUCK HORN FIRE
1170 ROAD FIRE
HOSPITAL ROAD FIRE
RATTLESNAKE FIRE
RATTLESNAKE FIRE
STEVENS FIRE
RANGER ROAD FIRE
STEVENS FIRE
43 FIRE
SUNNY FIRE
WILDFIRES AND STRAIGHT-LINE WINDS
WILDFIRES AND STRAIGHT-LINE WINDS
WILDFIRES AND STRAIGHT-LINE WINDS
WILDFIRES AND STRAIGHT-LINE WINDS
WILDFIRES AND STRAIGHT-LINE WINDS
WILDFIRES AND STRAIGHT-LINE WINDS
WILDFIRES AND STRAIGHT-LINE WINDS
328 FIRE
SEVERE STORMS, STRAIGHT-LINE WINDS, TORNADOES, AND FLOODING
SEVERE STORMS, STRAIGHT-LINE WINDS, TORNADOES, AND FLOODING
SEVERE STORMS, STRAIGHT-LINE WINDS, TORNADOES, AND FLOODING
SEVERE STORMS, STRAIGHT-LINE WINDS, TORNADOES, AND FLOODING
FEMA disaster context for Oklahoma
Oklahoma has 2,482 county-level FEMA disaster declarations spread across 77 counties. The most common declaration type is severe storm. Across all counties, FEMA datasets track $1.9B in combined public and individual assistance obligations.
The counties with the heaviest disaster history are Oklahoma County (51 declarations), Creek County (47), and Logan County (47). Each county page breaks down the timeline, hazard mix, spending categories, and flood insurance signals for that specific area.
Declaration counts reflect how often FEMA formally declared a disaster or emergency affecting a county — not the total number of natural events. A single hurricane can generate declarations across dozens of counties and multiple states. The county pages linked above show the per-county detail behind these state-level totals.