
Dr. Bret Haymore
Oklahoma Allergy & Asthma Clinic Inc.
Check today's pollen count by city in Oklahoma. Explore local allergy forecasts, monitor common seasonal allergens, and use city-level trends to plan around high pollen days.
Allergy Ava organizes statewide and local pollen information so you can compare conditions, anticipate seasonal flare-ups, and find relevant allergy forecast pages faster.
Pollen levels in Oklahoma can vary by city, weather, vegetation, and season. Choose a local forecast below to see the current allergy index, main allergen, and 5-day outlook for cities including Oklahoma City, Tulsa, Norman, Broken Arrow, Edmond, Lawton.
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Local allergy care
Use today's pollen forecast alongside nearby allergy and immunology profiles when symptoms need clinical follow-up, testing, or long-term treatment planning.

Oklahoma Allergy & Asthma Clinic Inc.

Oklahoma Allergy & Asthma Clinic Inc.

Oklahoma Allergy & Asthma Clinic Inc.

Allergist

Oklahoma Allergy & Asthma Clinic Inc.

Allergy Clinic of Tulsa
Showing 6 of 11 published allergist profiles in this area.
Oklahoma allergy sufferers can use this page to monitor pollen trends and find relevant city forecasts when available. Pollen levels vary by season, with tree pollen often peaking in spring, grass pollen becoming more active in late spring and summer, and weed pollen, especially ragweed, remaining a concern in late summer and fall.
Use Allergy Ava's city-level forecasts to plan outdoor activities, manage medication timing, and stay informed about the allergens most prevalent in your area. Our data is updated regularly to give you the most accurate picture of current conditions.
Oklahoma has overlapping pollen windows: long-running tree pollination, cool- and warm-season grasses, late-summer weeds, and mold that can remain present most of the year. Wind and fast weather changes can make each transition feel abrupt.
Mountain cedar usually refers to juniper-type pollen that can blow into central Oklahoma from regions such as the Arbuckle Mountains. It can appear outside the normal spring tree season and may spike during dry, windy patterns.
Tulsa and Broken Arrow have more eastern Oklahoma humidity, wooded terrain, creek corridors, and oak-hickory influence. Oklahoma City, Norman, Edmond, Moore, and Midwest City are more central-prairie and wind-corridor influenced.
Sometimes. Rain can briefly wash pollen out of the air, but storm outflows and dry wind behind a front can spread pollen, dust, mold fragments, and plant debris quickly. The weather after the storm often matters as much as the rain itself.
Today's statewide signal
Oklahoma allergy conditions can run long because cedar and other trees, cool- and warm-season grasses, ragweed, mold, dust, and strong wind patterns overlap across the state. Compare Oklahoma City, Tulsa, Norman, Broken Arrow, Edmond, Lawton, Moore, and Midwest City for local pollen levels, dominant allergens, weather context, and short-term trend signals.
Data updates regularly to reflect current conditions across Oklahoma cities.
Highest city index now
Norman
Oak · Very High
5
Live city comparison
Sort Oklahoma cities by pollen index, temperature, or trend. Select a city for its full local forecast.
| Main allergen | Weather context | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Norman | 5Very High | Oak | Stable Tomorrow looks similar, near very high conditions. | 81°F | Chance of showers Humid air may keep oak and outdoor mold irritation active. |
| Broken Arrow | 4High | Oak | Stable Tomorrow looks similar, near high conditions. | 80°F | Partly sunny 12 mph wind can disperse oak pollen quickly today. |
| Edmond | 3Moderate | Oak | Falling Forecast eases toward low conditions tomorrow. | 81°F | Partly sunny Watch oak levels and limit long outdoor exposure during peak hours. |
| Tulsa | 2Low | Grasses | Falling Forecast eases toward very low conditions tomorrow. | 80°F | Partly sunny Watch grasses levels and limit long outdoor exposure during peak hours. |
| Midwest City | 2Low | Grasses | Stable Tomorrow looks similar, near low conditions. | 81°F | Chance of showers Watch grasses levels and limit long outdoor exposure during peak hours. |
| Oklahoma City | 1Very Low | Grasses | Stable Tomorrow looks similar, near very low conditions. | 81°F | Humid Outdoor pollen exposure looks limited for most people today. |
| Lawton | 1Very Low | Grasses | Stable Tomorrow looks similar, near very low conditions. | 81°F | Partly sunny Outdoor pollen exposure looks limited for most people today. |
| Moore | 1Very Low | Grasses | Stable Tomorrow looks similar, near very low conditions. | 81°F | Partly sunny Outdoor pollen exposure looks limited for most people today. |
Oak is the main allergen
Pollen index
5
Trend
Stable
Humid air may keep oak and outdoor mold irritation active.
Oak is the main allergen
Pollen index
4
Trend
Stable
12 mph wind can disperse oak pollen quickly today.
Oak is the main allergen
Pollen index
3
Trend
Falling
Watch oak levels and limit long outdoor exposure during peak hours.
Grasses is the main allergen
Pollen index
2
Trend
Falling
Watch grasses levels and limit long outdoor exposure during peak hours.
Grasses is the main allergen
Pollen index
2
Trend
Stable
Watch grasses levels and limit long outdoor exposure during peak hours.
Grasses is the main allergen
Pollen index
1
Trend
Stable
Outdoor pollen exposure looks limited for most people today.
Grasses is the main allergen
Pollen index
1
Trend
Stable
Outdoor pollen exposure looks limited for most people today.
Grasses is the main allergen
Pollen index
1
Trend
Stable
Outdoor pollen exposure looks limited for most people today.
Regional allergy forecast
Central Oklahoma combines prairie wind, suburban trees, lawns, road edges, disturbed soil, and storm-driven weather swings. Cedar, oak, elm, grass, ragweed, and mold can all matter depending on the week.
Eastern Oklahoma has more wooded terrain, humidity, creek corridors, and oak-hickory influence than the central plains. Mold and tree pollen can feel more noticeable after wet stretches.
Lawton sits in a drier, windier part of the state where cedar or juniper, grass, dust, weeds, and fast-moving fronts can make allergy days feel harsher than the pollen number alone suggests.
State-specific pollen calendar
February to May
Elm, oak, maple or box elder, pecan, hickory, birch, mulberry, juniper, sycamore, cottonwood, willow, and pine can stretch the tree season. Mountain cedar can also arrive outside the usual spring window on regional wind.
April to November
Oklahoma can have cool-season grasses first, followed by warm-season Bermuda, Bahia, crabgrass, and Johnson grass. Warm-season grass pollen may continue until a good hard freeze.
Mid-August to hard freeze
Ragweed usually starts around mid-August as days shorten, with pigweed, carelessweed, dock, plantain, and other disturbed-ground weeds adding pressure through fall.
December to January
Outdoor pollen may ease after hard freezes, but mold can remain present much of the year unless a very hard freeze or snow cover suppresses it. Dust and indoor allergens can still bother sensitive residents.
Weather-pollen correlation
Wind can disperse pollen, rain can temporarily wash particles down, and humidity can increase mold irritation. The city table combines pollen and weather signals so users can compare outdoor risk without opening every city page.