10 Best Restaurants with Private Dining in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma for Corporate Events (2026)
The 10 best private dining restaurants in Oklahoma City for corporate events in 2026, scoped for room capacity, minimums, and AV for a presentation.
A private dining room is the only corporate venue where the rent is hidden inside the food. There’s rarely a room fee. Instead the restaurant sets a spend minimum, and a downtown OKC steakhouse will quote you something like $4,500 for a Thursday dinner in the private room, food and beverage combined. Hit it and the room is free. Miss it and the gap shows up as a charge. So the first question I ask is never the menu. It’s the minimum and the night.
Private dining fits corporate events in Oklahoma City because a client dinner or a team milestone wants service and a real menu, not a banquet line, and OKC’s dining scene has grown a deep bench of rooms that handle 20 to 80 well. The ten below are real restaurants, ordered by review depth, with the booking notes I’d put in a brief. Confirm the minimum, the room capacity, and whether you can run a short presentation before you reserve.
The Melting Pot of Oklahoma City
The Melting Pot on East Sheridan in Bricktown holds a 4.6 across 3,398 reviews, the deepest pool here. It’s a fondue concept, which makes it an interactive group dinner rather than a plated march. Figure 20 to 50 in the private and semi-private areas.
The shared-fondue format is a built-in icebreaker, genuinely useful for a team that doesn’t know each other yet. The multi-course pacing runs long, so plan a three-hour seating. Best for a team-building dinner or a small client group where the experience does the social work for you.
The Jones Assembly
The Jones Assembly on West Sheridan in Film Row carries a 4.5 across 3,288 reviews. It’s a restaurant, music venue, and event space in one, so it scales far past a normal private dining room. Plan for 100 to 400 across the patio, mezzanine, and main floor for a buyout.
The built-in stage and production rig mean a presentation, an awards segment, or live music needs no outside AV build. This is the rare restaurant that handles a full company party. Best for a holiday party, a launch event, or a large team celebration that wants food, a stage, and a bar in one room.
JK by Chef King
JK by Chef King on North Robinson runs a 4.7 across 2,964 reviews. It’s an upscale Asian-fusion room downtown with a refined private space. Figure 20 to 40 in the private dining area.
The chef-driven menu and the high rating make it a strong pick for an executive client dinner where the food should impress. The room is intimate, so this is a small-group play, not a large party. Best for a partner dinner, a recruiting dinner for a key hire, or a client thank-you of two dozen.
Rodizio Grill Brazilian Steakhouse Oklahoma City
Rodizio Grill on East Sheridan in Bricktown holds a 4.7 across 2,924 reviews. It’s a churrascaria, so the tableside-meat service keeps the room moving and the value visible. Plan for 30 to 80 in the private and semi-private spaces.
The all-you-can-eat format makes per-head budgeting clean, which procurement appreciates, and the continuous service keeps a large table fed without a kitchen bottleneck. Best for a sales-team dinner or a vendor-appreciation event where headcount is firm and the budget needs to be predictable.
Cheever’s Cafe
Cheever’s Cafe on North Hudson, in a converted 1940s flower shop, carries a 4.7 across 2,866 reviews. It’s a beloved Oklahoma-comfort concept with character and a private room. Figure 20 to 50 in the private dining space.
The historic-building charm and the local-favorite reputation make it feel like a real OKC welcome for out-of-town clients. The room is mid-size, so it suits a department dinner well. Best for a leadership dinner, a client welcome, or a team milestone that wants local flavor over a chain steakhouse.
Mahogany Prime Steakhouse
Mahogany Prime on West Sheridan downtown runs a 4.7 across 1,751 reviews. It’s an upscale steakhouse with private rooms built for business dinners. Plan for 20 to 60 across the private spaces.
The classic steakhouse setting is the safe, correct call for a conservative client or a board dinner, and the private rooms handle a short toast or remarks cleanly. Confirm AV if you need a screen. Best for a board dinner, a closing celebration, or a formal client dinner downtown.
Mickey Mantle’s Steakhouse
Mickey Mantle’s on Mickey Mantle Drive in Bricktown holds a 4.4 across 1,659 reviews. It’s a baseball-themed downtown steakhouse beside the ballpark with multiple private spaces. Figure 30 to 90 across the rooms.
The Bricktown ballpark location adds an option to pair dinner with a Dodgers game for a client group. The themed setting reads as distinctly OKC. Best for a client outing tied to a ballgame or a larger team dinner that wants Bricktown energy.
Tellers
Tellers on North Robinson, inside The National hotel downtown, carries a 4.4 across 1,436 reviews. It’s a restaurant in a restored 1931 bank building, so the architecture is the decor. Plan for 20 to 50 in the private spaces.
The vaulted bank-lobby setting gives a dinner instant grandeur with zero rental decor, and the in-hotel location helps with out-of-town guest logistics. Best for an executive dinner or a client event where the room itself carries the impression.
Broadway 10 Bar & Chophouse
Broadway 10 on North Broadway in Automobile Alley runs a 4.6 across 1,430 reviews. It’s a modern chophouse in the historic Buick Building with private dining options. Figure 20 to 50 in the private room.
The Automobile Alley district puts it among the city’s design-forward dining, and the modern room suits a younger executive crowd better than a traditional steakhouse. Best for a contemporary client dinner or a team celebration that wants a current, polished room.
Paseo Grill
Paseo Grill on Paseo, in the historic Paseo arts district, holds a 4.7 across 1,419 reviews. It’s a longtime fine-dining favorite with an intimate private space. Plan for 20 to 40 in the private area.
The arts-district setting and the loyal-local following make it feel like a genuine OKC institution, ideal for a small, warm gathering. The room is intimate, so keep the group tight. Best for a small leadership dinner or an intimate client dinner in a neighborhood with character.
How to choose among them
Match the room to the format first. If you need a stage and a buyout, The Jones Assembly is the only one here built for it; for a 20-to-50 client dinner, the steakhouses and the character rooms all work. Then read the spend minimum against your real headcount and beverage plan, because that floor is the rent. Compare service styles in catering cost per head by service style so you know what a plated dinner versus a churrascaria does to the per-head number. For the full set, see restaurants with private dining in Oklahoma City.
If you’re torn between a restaurant room and a hall, banquet hall vs restaurant private dining for 100 lays out the tradeoff, and how to book a restaurant with private dining covers minimums, deposits, and the AV question.
Give me your headcount, your date, and whether you need a screen for remarks, and I’ll narrow these ten to the two that fit your dinner.
Need quotes for your event?
Tell us where, when, and how many. Up to 3 venues will respond — usually inside a day.