Download OpenStreetMap Data for Oklahoma

Select an area within Oklahoma and choose a data type to download from OpenStreetMap via the Overpass API. Data is returned as GeoJSON.

1. Select Area

2. Choose Data Type

Data from OpenStreetMap contributors, licensed under ODbL.

Powered by the Overpass API. Please use responsibly and avoid excessive queries.

Download Oklahoma Map Data from OpenStreetMap

Use this free tool to download geospatial data for Oklahoma directly from OpenStreetMap. The map is pre-centered on Oklahoma — draw a bounding box to select an area, choose a data type, and export the results as GeoJSON. No sign-up or software installation required.

Available Oklahoma Data Types

Oklahoma Roads & Highways

Download motorways, highways, residential streets, paths, and cycleways across Oklahoma.

Oklahoma Building Footprints

Extract building outlines including residential, commercial, and industrial structures in Oklahoma.

Oklahoma Waterways

Rivers, streams, canals, and drainage ditches throughout Oklahoma.

Oklahoma Railways

Rail lines, stations, and light rail networks in Oklahoma.

Oklahoma Land Use

Parks, forests, residential zones, commercial areas, and farmland in Oklahoma.

Oklahoma Amenities

Schools, hospitals, restaurants, shops, and public services across Oklahoma.

Oklahoma Natural Features

Water bodies, forests, coastlines, peaks, and wetlands in Oklahoma.

Oklahoma Power Infrastructure

Power lines, substations, and generators throughout Oklahoma.

How to Download Oklahoma OSM Data

  1. Select an area — Use Shift + drag on the map to draw a bounding box within Oklahoma.
  2. Choose a data type — Pick from roads, buildings, waterways, railways, land use, amenities, natural features, or power infrastructure.
  3. Download — Click the download button to fetch data from the Overpass API. Preview the results on the map, then save as GeoJSON.

Output Format

Data is exported as GeoJSON, a widely supported open standard for geospatial data. GeoJSON files can be opened in QGIS, ArcGIS, Mapbox, Leaflet, Google Earth, and many other GIS tools. You can also use QuickMapTools to convert GeoJSON to Shapefile, convert GeoJSON to KML, or visualize GeoJSON on a map.