EMF Radiation Testing in Tulsa, Oklahoma
Tulsa is one of America’s great Art Deco cities — a place where the oil boom of the 1920s and 1930s left behind a downtown of zigzag-and-terra-cotta towers and a leafy ring of Midtown neighborhoods full of period mansions. Roughly 410,000 people live in the city and around a million across the metro, and that history shapes its EMF profile in a very specific way: the grand homes of Maple Ridge, the bungalows of Brookside and the older streets around Swan Lake and Cherry Street were wired generations ago, and a surprising number still run on knob-and-tube or ungrounded circuits. Layer on a Tornado Alley grid that keeps most lines overhead, summers hot enough to push central air hard for months, and a wireless network expanding across the city, and the result is a mix you don’t see in a brand-new Sun Belt subdivision. Whether you live in a 1925 Maple Ridge home, a Midtown bungalow, or a newer place out in Broken Arrow, it pays to know what is around you.
ClearEMF is based in Buffalo and Western New York, where we provide hands-on inspections. We don’t travel to Tulsa for on-site testing, but we help Tulsans the practical way: with a free online EMF assessment, a remote consultation to review your specific home, and the shielding products and supplements we recommend most.
Common EMF Sources Around Tulsa
- PSO smart meters. Public Service Company of Oklahoma (PSO), the electric utility serving Tulsa, has deployed wireless smart meters across its territory, so most Tulsa homes now carry an RF-transmitting meter on an exterior wall that reports usage back to the utility.
- 5G and cell towers. Tulsa’s carriers have built out 4G/5G coverage with macro towers along the highways and small-cell nodes through downtown, the Arts District and busy Midtown corridors like Cherry Street and Brookside, putting antennas closer to some homes than others.
- Overhead lines in Tornado Alley. Sitting in Tornado Alley, much of greater Tulsa keeps its distribution lines overhead on poles, and homes near a feeder line, pole-top transformer or substation can see elevated magnetic fields indoors.
- Heavy summer cooling. Oklahoma summers are long and hot, so central AC, attic fans and pool pumps run hard for months, and that sustained load is a common source of dirty electricity riding on a home’s wiring.
- Historic Art Deco-era housing. Tulsa’s oil-boom mansions in Maple Ridge and the older homes across Midtown frequently retain knob-and-tube or ungrounded wiring, which tends to raise electric fields — a hallmark of the city’s most architecturally prized neighborhoods.
What EMF Radiation Testing Looks At in a Tulsa Home
A thorough EMF evaluation — whether it is done in person or walked through remotely — covers four distinct categories, and a Tulsa home, especially an older one, often shows a very different mix than a new build:
- Magnetic fields. In Tulsa these come from the panel and subpanels, the AC condenser and pool equipment, the pole-top transformer out front, and any overhead feeder lines nearby. Homes close to a substation or a major line tend to read higher.
- Radio-frequency / microwave. Often the biggest contributor: your own PSO smart meter and Wi-Fi, a houseful of wireless devices, plus the macro towers and downtown and Midtown small-cell nodes that may sit within view of your home.
- Electric fields. This is where Tulsa’s heritage homes stand out — knob-and-tube and ungrounded wiring in Maple Ridge, Swan Lake and older Midtown houses can raise electric fields right around the bed and desk where you spend hours.
- Dirty electricity. Months of hard-running central air, variable-speed pool pumps, LED lighting and dimmers all push high-frequency noise back onto a home’s wiring, and vintage circuits can make it worse.

Downtown Tulsa rises beyond a fountain-lined park — the heart of America’s Art Deco city, where overhead lines, hard summer cooling and aging Maple Ridge wiring shape home EMF exposure. · Photo: Caleb Long / CC BY-SA
How ClearEMF Helps You Test & Remediate in Tulsa
Since our meters and technicians are in Western New York, we support Tulsa two honest ways — no travel required:
- Free EMF Home Assessment. Answer a few questions about your devices, meter and neighborhood and get an instant A–F exposure grade with tailored tips.
- Remote EMF consultation. Walk through your home with us by phone or video. We’ll identify the likely top contributors — a nearby tower, your PSO meter, the AC or vintage wiring — and build a personalized, product-based plan to reduce them.
- Shielding products & supplements. Order the same Faraday guards, filters, paint, canopies and supportive supplements we recommend to clients — shipped to your door.
How Our Remote EMF Testing Works
You don’t have to wait for a technician to travel to Oklahoma. A remote EMF consultation is a structured, one-on-one session:
- Intake. You tell us about your home type and age, the rooms you are most concerned about, your goals, your PSO meter, and what towers, devices and overhead lines are nearby.
- Guided walk-through. Over video or phone we go room by room, looking at where your bed, desk and electronics sit relative to the panel, meter, AC and any outside towers or lines.
- DIY measurement (optional). If you own or rent an EMF meter, we coach you through taking readings correctly so the numbers actually mean something — useful in older homes where electric fields can be high.
- Personalized plan. You get a clear, prioritized list of what to change and which shielding products fit your home — no guesswork and no pressure to buy things you don’t need.
Find Out Your Tulsa Home’s EMF Grade
Take the free 2-minute assessment, or book a remote consultation to build your shielding plan.
Free EMF AssessmentBook a Remote ConsultHelping Renters and Homeowners Across Tulsa
The right approach changes with the home. We help renters and homeowners across Tulsa and its suburbs — in historic Midtown neighborhoods like Maple Ridge, Brookside, Cherry Street and Swan Lake, in and around the downtown Arts District, and out through the suburbs of Broken Arrow, Jenks, Owasso and Bixby. Owners of grand Art Deco-era and bungalow homes usually wrestle with electric fields and dirty electricity from knob-and-tube or ungrounded wiring, suburban owners tend to focus on smart devices and dirty electricity, and downtown loft and apartment dwellers on radio-frequency exposure and their building’s electrical systems.
Practical Ways to Reduce EMF in Your Tulsa Home
You don’t need an in-person visit to start lowering your exposure today:
- Bedroom first. Keep phones and tablets out of the room or on airplane mode, move the bed away from walls that back onto the electrical panel, the AC equipment or a pool pump, and unplug unused electronics overnight.
- Wi-Fi and devices. Put the router on a timer or switch it off at night, use wired Ethernet for desktops, TVs and game consoles, and turn off Wi-Fi on anything that is hard-wired.
- Your PSO meter. If a bed, sofa or desk backs onto the exterior wall where the PSO meter sits, a smart meter guard can cut the RF radiating inward.
- Vintage wiring and cooling load. In older Maple Ridge and Midtown homes, dirty electricity filters near the AC, electronics and aging circuits, along with proper grounding, help with the dirty-electricity and electric-field issues that knob-and-tube wiring tends to cause.
Browse all of our recommended shielding products to match the sources most likely in your home, or explore nutrition and supplements for the electrosensitive.
About ClearEMF
ClearEMF provides EMF inspection, testing and shielding guidance. We are based at 656 North French Road, Suite 2C, Amherst, NY 14228, where we offer hands-on inspections across Buffalo and Western New York. For Tulsa and other cities we help through remote consultations, a free EMF assessment, and shielding-product guidance. Reach us at (716) 795-2536 or visit clearemf.com.
Tulsa EMF Testing Questions
Does ClearEMF do in-person EMF inspections in Tulsa?
Our hands-on EMF inspections are based in Buffalo and Western New York, so we do not currently travel to Tulsa for on-site testing. For Tulsa homes we offer a remote EMF consultation by phone or video, a free online EMF assessment, and the shielding products we recommend most often.
Does my PSO smart meter give off EMF?
Yes. Public Service Company of Oklahoma, the electric utility for the Tulsa area, has rolled out wireless smart meters that transmit radio-frequency signals to report your usage. A Faraday-style smart meter guard can reduce the RF that radiates back into your home while still allowing the meter to communicate with the utility.
Does Tulsa's historic Art Deco and Maple Ridge housing affect EMF?
It can. Tulsa's oil-era Maple Ridge mansions and many older Midtown homes still carry knob-and-tube or ungrounded wiring, which can raise electric fields and add dirty electricity on the circuits near where you sleep and work. A remote review can help pinpoint whether vintage wiring is contributing and what to do about it.
How can I lower my EMF exposure in Tulsa without an inspection?
Practical steps include turning off Wi-Fi at night, using wired connections where possible, keeping phones away from your body while you sleep, adding dirty electricity filters near your AC and electronics, and using a smart meter guard. A remote consultation can help you prioritize for your specific home.
What is included in a remote EMF consultation?
We review your home layout, devices, meter and neighborhood over phone or video, talk through what is likely contributing most to your exposure, and build a personalized, product-based plan to reduce it. Call (716) 795-2536 or use our contact page to set one up.
