Oklahomans to vote on raising the minimum wage in 2026

File boxes containing the signatures of supporters of an initiative petition to increase the state’s minimum wage are stacked Sept. 15, 2024, in front of an Oklahoma City building. (Photo courtesy of Raise the Wage Oklahoma)

OKLAHOMA CITY – A state question to raise the minimum wage in Oklahoma will be voted on statewide during the June 16, 2026 primary election.

If passed by voters, the initiative would increase the minimum wage to $12 an hour in 2027 from the current $7.25, which is also the federal minimum wage. It calls for additional gradual increases until it reaches $15 an hour in 2029.

Gov. Kevin Stitt issued an executive order Wednesday assigning the state question to the 2026 primary.

The question called for an increase in minimum wage to $9 beginning in 2025. However, as the initiative won’t be voted on until 2026, the minimum wage would jump to $12 in 2027, skipping the 2025 and 2026 gradual increases.

“I’m disappointed, but not surprised that the governor is deciding to play politics with the lives of working Oklahomans,” said Amber England, a spokesperson for Raise the Wage Oklahoma. “This is over 320,000 Oklahomans have waited over 15 years now to see their wages increase through an increase in the minimum wage, and they’re going to have to wait two more years.”

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