New Orleans · the midpoint
New Orleans is a consolidated city-parish located along the Mississippi River in the U.S. state of Louisiana. Read more →
The fair place to meet is New Orleans, LA — the city closest to the midpoint of Oklahoma City and Orlando. From the farther side that’s about 12 hr 5 min of driving.
Recommended midpoint
New Orleans, LA
From Oklahoma City
12 hr 5 min
576 mi to New Orleans
From Orlando
11 hr 10 min
533 mi to New Orleans
Orlando has the shorter trip; the split is off by about 55 min. The alternatives below can even it out. Oklahoma City and Orlando are about 1,058 miles apart.
Oklahoma City and Orlando are about 1,058 miles apart by road. Split the difference and you arrive near New Orleans, the city closest to the halfway point between them. That puts roughly 12 hr 5 min of driving on the Oklahoma City side and 11 hr 10 min on the Orlando side — the fairest single meeting point among the cities near the middle.
Over this distance most people will fly rather than drive the whole way. New Orleans still makes a fair, central place for Oklahoma City and Orlando to converge, splitting the travel instead of asking one side to cross the country.
If New Orleans doesn't have what you're after, Birmingham and Memphis are also close to the midpoint and worth a look — each keeps the drive reasonably balanced between Oklahoma City and Orlando.
New Orleans is a consolidated city-parish located along the Mississippi River in the U.S. state of Louisiana. Read more →
Oklahoma City, often shortened to OKC, is the capital and most populous city in the U.S. state of Oklahoma. It is the 21st-most populous U.S. city and 8th largest in the Southern United States, with a population of 681,054 at the 2020 census. Read more →
Orlando is a city in and the county seat of Orange County, Florida, United States. Part of Central Florida, it is the fourth-most populous city in the state and its most populous inland city, with a population of 307,573 at the 2020 census. Read more →
City descriptions adapted from Wikipedia (CC BY-SA); photos via Wikimedia Commons, credited above.
Estimates use straight-line distance and typical road speeds; real drive times vary with route and traffic.