Oklahoma HiSET Alternative: GED & Best Options

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Does Oklahoma Have a HiSET Alternative? Yes, Oklahoma Offers Both GED and HiSET. You can opt for GED as an alternative. Oklahoma is one of a small number of states that offers BOTH the GED and the HiSET. Both exams lead to the same credential: the Oklahoma High School Diploma, issued by the Oklahoma Department of Education. 

The Oklahoma Department of Career and Technology Education (ODCTE) oversees the state’s Adult Education and Family Literacy (AEFL) program, which administers high school equivalency testing for the state. 

The official Oklahoma.gov testing page states: ‘Oklahoma is currently offering the use of two high school equivalency tests (GED and HiSET). Those who pass one of the two approved tests will receive the state’s official high school equivalency diploma, a credential issued by the Oklahoma Department of Education.’

There are 32 AEFL programs providing adult education classes throughout Oklahoma. These free or low-cost programs can help you prepare for either the GED or the HiSET. Oklahoma also has a brand-new Oklahoma Career Readiness Diploma program (launched in 2026) that allows adults to use old test scores and prior achievements toward a credential.

How Oklahoma Compares to Neighboring States

State Available Exam(s) — 2026
Oklahoma BOTH GED and HiSET — your choice; same credential either way
Texas (neighboring) GED only — HiSET not available
Kansas (neighboring) GED only — HiSET not available
Missouri (neighboring) Both GED and HiSET available
Arkansas (neighboring) GED only — HiSET not available
Colorado (neighboring) Both GED and HiSET available
New Mexico (neighboring) Both GED and HiSET available
Massachusetts HiSET is the primary exam; GED not offered for state HSE

Notable: Many neighboring states (Texas, Kansas, Arkansas) are GED-only. Oklahoma’s decision to maintain both options gives Oklahoma test-takers more flexibility than residents of most surrounding states. 

GED vs. HiSET: Which Should You Choose in Oklahoma?

Because Oklahoma offers both exams, choosing between them is the first important decision. Both lead to the same Oklahoma High School Diploma — the only difference is the exam format, cost, structure, and testing experience. You cannot combine GED and HiSET scores in Oklahoma.

GED vs. HiSET in Oklahoma

Feature GED (Oklahoma) HiSET (Oklahoma)
Credential issued Oklahoma High School Diploma Oklahoma High School Diploma
Number of subjects/subtests 4 subjects 5 subtests (Language Arts Reading and Writing are separate)
In-person test center cost $41/subject = $164 total $33/subtest = $165 total (before April 1, 2026 fee increase)
Online (at-home) cost $41/subject = $164 total $48.50/subtest = $242.50 total (before April 1, 2026 fee increase)
2026 fee increase? No announced increase YES — HiSET fee increase effective April 1, 2026. Verify current fees at hiset.org/oklahoma/
Passing score 145 out of 200 per subject 8 out of 20 per subtest; essay 2 out of 6; 45 combined total
Total test time ~7.5 hours ~7–8 hours
Math difficulty Higher — algebraic reasoning, functions, application-focused Slightly lower thresholds and broader coverage
Essay required? Yes — Extended Response (45 min, argumentative, text-based) in RLA Yes — Writing essay (45 min) as a separate subtest
Computer-only? Computer-based only (paper by accommodation only) Paper, computer, or at-home online options available in Oklahoma
Online at-home option? YES — GED online proctored, requires GED Ready green score YES — HiSET @Home, no practice test required beforehand
Score tiers Pass, College Ready (165+), College Ready + Credit (175+) Pass only; Honors (15+ per subtest, 23+ on essay)
Can combine with other exam? NO — cannot combine GED and HiSET scores in Oklahoma NO — cannot combine GED and HiSET scores in Oklahoma
Retake waiting period No wait for first 2 retakes; 60 days after 3rd attempt No wait between retakes; maximum 6 times per calendar year (pay full fee on 1st and 4th attempts only)
Credential delivery Electronic diploma and transcript via Parchment (emailed) Electronic diploma and transcript via Parchment (check email for instructions)
Best for Test-takers who want college credit tiers, single combined scoring, prefer 4 subjects, no-residency testing Test-takers who prefer paper testing option, separate Writing subtest, lower cost at test center, or more flexible retake structure

 

2026 HiSET Fee Increase — Act Before April 1, 2026 If Choosing HiSET

HiSET is implementing a fee increase effective April 1, 2026. The current fees listed in this guide may no longer be accurate after that date. Before scheduling your HiSET test in Oklahoma, verify the current fees at hiset.org/oklahoma/. If you are considering HiSET, scheduling before April 1, 2026 may save you money.

Which Test Is Right for You? 

Choose GED if… Choose HiSET if…
You want to earn potential college credits (175+ scores can earn up to 10 semester credit hours) You prefer a paper-based exam option (not available for GED without accommodation)
You want more retake flexibility without an annual limit You prefer to pay for Writing and Reading separately rather than combined
You want to test across multiple subjects quickly in one day at a test center You previously studied for the HiSET and want to use that preparation
You are more comfortable with a computer-based test You prefer the lower in-person test center cost per subtest ($33 before increase vs. $41 for GED)
You plan to attend an Oklahoma college or university and want College Ready scores to bypass placement tests You prefer the HiSET’s lower individual passing thresholds (8/20 vs. GED’s 145/200)
You prefer four combined subjects rather than five separate subtests You do not have a GED.com account and prefer the PSI/HiSET system

Oklahoma Eligibility Requirements

Standard Eligibility: Both Exams

The following eligibility criteria apply to both the GED and HiSET in Oklahoma, per official ODCTE AEFL policies:

  • Must be at least 16 years old (18 with no special conditions; 16-17 requires AEFL Release Form for Minors)
  • Must not currently be enrolled in, or required to be enrolled in, high school
  • Must not have already graduated from high school or hold a high school equivalency certificate
  • NO residency requirement — you do not have to be a resident of Oklahoma to take either the GED or HiSET exam in Oklahoma. This is one of Oklahoma’s most distinctive and advantageous policies.
  • No prep class required before testing — you are not required to take preparation courses before either exam
  • Practice test not required before in-person GED testing; required before online GED testing. HiSET: practice test encouraged but not required

Students Age 16 or 17: AEFL Release Form for Minors

Oklahoma uses a single form — the AEFL Release Form for Minors — for both GED and HiSET 16 and 17-year-old test-takers. The process is the same for both exams:

  • Complete the AEFL Release Form for Minors — available at oklahoma.gov/careertech AEFL forms page or from your selected test center
  • Submit the completed form to the test center BEFORE scheduling your exam
  • The form requires documentation that the student is not enrolled in school and has parental and school district approval
  • For GED specifically: the historical state form also asks the student’s last school attended, superintendent concurrence, and parent agreement that it is in the student’s best interest to attend adult education classes
  • For online GED testing: a parent or guardian must also be present at the pre-test check-in to give consent and authorize the underage tester to be recorded. If the parent or guardian is absent, the session is revoked.

Identification Requirements: Both Exams

Government-issued, non-expired photo ID is required for both GED and HiSET. Acceptable forms:

  • Valid driver’s license
  • Valid state-issued picture identification card
  • Passport
  • Military ID
  •  Other forms of national or foreign government ID (name, date of birth, signature, and photograph must all be present on the ID)

Oklahoma GED Complete 2026 Guide

GED At-a-Glance for Oklahoma

Fact Detail
Credential Oklahoma High School Diploma (issued by Oklahoma Department of Education)
GED State Administrator Lance Allee | GED Administrator, OK State Dept. of Career and Technology Education | 1500 West Seventh Ave., Stillwater, OK 74074-4398 | (405) 880-5235 | Fax: (405) 522-5394
Number of subjects 4 (Reasoning Through Language Arts, Mathematical Reasoning, Science, Social Studies)
Total test time ~7.5 hours (subjects can be taken separately)
Passing score 145 out of 200 per subject
Score tiers Pass (145-164), College Ready (165-174), College Ready + Credit (175-200)
Test format Computer-based only; paper by special accommodation only
Cost per subject (in-person or online) $41 per subject ($164 for all four)
In-person retake fee $15 test center fee (GED Testing Service waives $26 fee); one discounted retake per subject within 365 days
Online retake cost $41 per subject — no discounted retake for online testing
Retake waiting period No wait for first 2 retakes (in-person); 60-day wait after 3rd attempt. Online: 60-day wait after 2nd attempt.
Online testing available? YES — GED Online Proctored; requires passing GED Ready (green score) within 60 days of scheduling
Languages English and Spanish
No residency requirement? Correct — non-residents of Oklahoma can take the GED in Oklahoma
Transcript/diploma delivery Oklahoma partners with Parchment. After passing all 4 subjects: free electronic diploma and transcript emailed to your GED.com account address. Download links are time-limited.

GED Subjects and Format in Oklahoma

Subject Time Limit Content and Format
Reasoning Through Language Arts (RLA) 150 min (10-min break) Reading comprehension, extended response essay (45 min, argumentative), grammar and writing mechanics; multiple choice, drag-and-drop, extended response
Mathematical Reasoning 115 minutes Basic math, geometry, graphs, algebra, and functions; on-screen calculator for Part 2; calculator-free in Part 1
Science 90 minutes Life science, physical science (chemistry and physics), earth and space science; data interpretation from graphs and diagrams
Social Studies 70 minutes U.S. history, civics and government, economics, geography; map and primary source document analysis

GED Online Testing in Oklahoma

Yes, Online GED Testing Is Available in Oklahoma

Oklahoma supports the GED Online Proctored exam. You can take the GED from home or any quiet, private location with a computer, webcam, and stable internet. You must first achieve a ‘green’ (Likely to Pass) score on the GED Ready practice test within 60 days of scheduling your online exam for each subject. The cost is the same as in-person: $41 per subject.

  • GED Ready practice test required before online testing (~$7.99/subject); not required for in-person testing
  • All four online GED subjects must be scheduled separately — one at a time
  • Online retakes cost $41 per subject with no discount; 60-day wait applies after 2nd online attempt on the same subject
  • For under-18 online testing: parent or guardian must be present at the pre-test check-in or session is revoked

Oklahoma HiSET Complete 2026 Guide

HiSET Fee Increase Effective April 1, 2026

HiSET is implementing a price increase for each subtest effective April 1, 2026. The fees listed below reflect pre-April 2026 pricing. Always verify current fees at hiset.org/oklahoma/  before scheduling.

HiSET At-a-Glance for Oklahoma

Fact Detail
Credential Oklahoma High School Diploma (same credential as GED — issued by Oklahoma Department of Education)
Administrator Oklahoma AEFL / Oklahoma Department of Career and Technology Education; HiSET administered by PSI Services LLC (formerly ETS)
Number of subtests 5 (Language Arts Reading, Language Arts Writing, Mathematics, Science, Social Studies)
Total test time ~7–8 hours (subtests can be taken separately or multiple in one day)
Passing score per subtest 8 out of 20 per subtest; Writing essay minimum 2 out of 6; combined total of at least 45 across all five subtests
HiSET Honors score Score of 15 or higher per subtest (23+ for the essay) is considered Honors
Test format options Paper-based, computer-based, or at-home online (@Home). Oklahoma offers all three options.
Cost — In-Person (Test Center, paper or computer) $33 per subtest ($165 for all 5) — BEFORE April 1, 2026 increase. Breakdown: $20.50 test fee + $7.50 test center fee + $5.00 state admin fee
Cost — @Home (Online Proctored) $48.50 per subtest ($242.50 for all 5) — BEFORE April 1, 2026 increase. Breakdown: $20.50 test fee + $23.00 remote proctor fee + $5.00 state admin fee
Retake fee structure Pay full test fee ONLY on 1st and 4th attempts. Retakes 2 and 3: only test center fee ($7.50) or online proctor fee ($23). 4th attempt resets to full fee. Maximum 6 attempts per subtest per calendar year.
Languages English and Spanish
No residency requirement? Correct — non-residents of Oklahoma can take the HiSET in Oklahoma
Credential delivery Oklahoma AEFL partners with Parchment. After passing all 5 subtests: check your email for instructions on accessing official documents at Parchment.
myHiSET account Create/log in at: test-takers.psiexams.com/hisetoklahoma/auth/login

HiSET Subjects and Format in Oklahoma

Subtest Time Limit Content and Format
Language Arts — Reading 65 minutes Literary and informational texts; multiple choice questions on comprehension, analysis, and inference
Language Arts — Writing 120 minutes total (Part 1: 75 min; Part 2 essay: 45 min) Part 1: grammar, usage, and sentence structure (multiple choice). Part 2: written essay using two source passages, 45 minutes.
Mathematics 90 minutes Arithmetic, algebra, data analysis, geometry; calculator allowed; formula sheet provided
Science 80 minutes Life science, physical science, earth science; multiple choice; data interpretation from graphs and diagrams
Social Studies 70 minutes U.S. history, world history, civics/government, economics, geography; multiple choice; primary source document analysis

HiSET Online Testing (@Home) in Oklahoma

Oklahoma offers the HiSET @Home option for online proctored testing. Unlike GED online testing, no practice test is required before scheduling HiSET @Home. Requirements:

  • Computer (Windows or Mac), webcam, stable internet connection, and a private workspace
  • Valid government-issued non-expired photo ID with name, date of birth, signature, and photograph
  • System requirements and test environment guidelines must be met — see psiexams.com for details
  • Cost: $48.50 per subtest ($242.50 total) before April 1, 2026 fee increase
  • Under-18 testers: AEFL Release Form for Minors must be submitted to a test center before scheduling

HiSET Retake Structure in Oklahoma

HiSET Retake Fee Structure — Lower Cost for Repeat Test-Takers

Oklahoma’s HiSET retake structure is uniquely favorable. You only pay the FULL test fee on the 1st and 4th attempts. For retakes 2 and 3, you pay ONLY the test center fee ($7.50 in-person) or proctor fee ($23 online). This means your 2nd and 3rd attempts at a test center cost only $7.50 + $5.00 state admin fee = $12.50 — significantly less than the GED’s $15 retake fee.

  • 1st attempt: Full fee ($33 in-person or $48.50 online)
  • 2nd attempt: Test center fee only ($12.50 in-person; $28.00 online)
  • 3rd attempt: Test center fee only ($12.50 in-person; $28.00 online)
  • 4th attempt: Full fee again (resets)
  • Maximum: 6 attempts per subtest per calendar year

Oklahoma’s Unique Diploma Pathways

Oklahoma offers three distinct pathways for adults to earn a high school diploma or credential — the GED, the HiSET, and two additional pathways that do not require passing a standardized exam:

GED (Exam-Based)

Pass all four GED subjects with a score of 145+. Oklahoma partners with Parchment for credential delivery. Register at GED.com. Cost: $41/subject ($164 total). No residency required.

HiSET (Exam-Based)

Pass all five HiSET subtests with a score of 8+ per subtest (2+ on essay) and a combined 45+. Oklahoma partners with Parchment for HiSET records. Register at hiset.org/oklahoma. Cost: $33/subtest ($165 total before April 2026 increase). No residency required.

Oklahoma Career Readiness Diploma 

The Oklahoma Career Readiness Diploma is a brand-new program launched by Oklahoma AEFL in early 2026. It is designed to help the approximately 279,000 Oklahomans who do not have a high school diploma — particularly those who passed some GED or HiSET sections but never finished, or who have significant work and life experience. A News on 6 report from February 2026 described it as follows:

  • Allows test-takers to ‘mix and match’ previous academic successes — including passing a GED section ten years ago or earning credits in high school before leaving
  • Requires 12 hours at an Adult Learning Center focused on real-world workforce skills: professional resume writing, interview preparation, and career coaching
  • After completing the 12 hours and meeting the academic requirements, students receive an Oklahoma career readiness credential
  • The program was already issuing credentials within its first two weeks of launch
  • Contact AEFL to find the nearest participating program: email Mikaila Intemann at [email protected] or call (405) 743-5556
  • Documents available at oklahoma.gov: Career Readiness Application, Career Readiness Overview, Employment Verification Form, and Academic Requirements Checklist

Thirty College Credit Hours Pathway

Any Oklahoma resident who has been admitted to any accredited Oklahoma college or university may be awarded a high school diploma by the Oklahoma State Department of Education, provided that such person has successfully completed at least 30 hours of college work at an accredited college or university.

  • Must be an Oklahoma resident
  • Must be admitted to an accredited Oklahoma college or university
  • Must have completed at least 30 college credit hours
  • Contact Oklahoma Department of Education, Accreditation Standards division at (405) 521-3335

Comparison: Oklahoma’s Four Diploma Pathways

Feature GED HiSET Career Readiness 30 College Credits
Age min. 16+ 16+ Any adult Any adult
Residency Not required Not required Oklahoma Oklahoma
Format 4 exams 5 exams 12 hrs + portfolio College transcripts
Prior work counts? No No YES YES
Best for Fast exam path; college credits Paper option; lower retake cost Near-completers with work/life experience Adults with 30+ college credits

Oklahoma HSE Fraud Warning

Official Warning from Oklahoma AEFL

The Oklahoma Department of Career and Technology Education issues this important warning: Although some high school equivalency test preparation programs may issue ‘diplomas or certificates’ demonstrating program completion, these documents ARE NOT official Oklahoma high school equivalency credentials. The Oklahoma Department of Education (OSDE) only authorizes the companies offering the GED or HiSET to issue an Oklahoma High School Equivalency Certificate or Official Transcript. Do not pay any program that claims to issue an official Oklahoma diploma without going through GED.com or hiset.org.

The official and only ways to earn an Oklahoma High School Diploma are:

  • Pass the GED through the official GED.com system
  • Pass the HiSET through the official hiset.org/oklahoma system
  • Complete the Oklahoma Career Readiness Diploma through an AEFL-approved program
  • Complete 30 college credit hours through an accredited Oklahoma institution

Oklahoma AEFL recommends taking advantage of free or low-cost preparation programs through approved Oklahoma Adult Education and Family Literacy providers before paying for any outside prep program. There are 32 AEFL programs throughout the state providing free or low-cost instruction.

How to Get Your GED or HiSET in Oklahoma

For GED Test-Takers

  1. Create a free account at GED.com and select Oklahoma as your testing state
  2. If you are 16 or 17: complete the AEFL Release Form for Minors and submit to your test center before scheduling
  3. Enroll in a free or low-cost AEFL adult education program in your county — approved classes by county at oklahoma.gov/careertech AEFL approved classes page
  4. Study using free resources from GED.com and your AEFL prep program. Take free practice previews at ged.com/study/free-online-ged-test.html
  5. For online testing: take the GED Ready practice test (~$7.99/subject) and achieve a green score before scheduling
  6. Log in to GED.com, schedule your subject tests, and pay $41 per subject. For in-person testing at a test center, use the test center locator at GED.com.
  7. After passing all 4 subjects: check your email for your free electronic diploma and transcript from Parchment. Download links are time-limited.

For HiSET Test-Takers

  1. Create a free myHiSET account at test-takers.psiexams.com/hisetoklahoma/auth/login
  2. If you are 16 or 17: complete the AEFL Release Form for Minors and submit to your test center before scheduling
  3. Enroll in a free or low-cost AEFL adult education program. Verify current HiSET fees at hiset.org/oklahoma/, especially important given the April 1, 2026 fee increase
  4.  Study using free HiSET resources at hiset.org/resource-library/ and your AEFL prep program. Take a free practice test at hiset.org/prepare-for-your-test/practice-tests/
  5. Schedule your subtests through the myHiSET portal. Choose your format: paper, computer, or @Home (online)
  6. Take subtests one at a time or schedule multiple in one day (if test center allows)
  7.  After passing all 5 subtests: check your email for instructions on accessing your official credentials through Parchment

Free GED and HiSET Classes in Oklahoma

Oklahoma AEFL Programs: Free or Low-Cost Statewide

Oklahoma has 32 AEFL (Adult Education and Family Literacy) programs providing free or low-cost adult education, GED and HiSET prep, ESL instruction, and career readiness services throughout the state. These programs are funded through the Oklahoma Department of Career and Technology Education and WIOA federal funding.

Find approved classes by county: oklahoma.gov/careertech/educators/adult-education-and-family-literacy/students/classes.html 

 

Provider Details
Oklahoma City Community College (OCCC) Adult Education Free GED and HiSET prep classes. Morning and evening options. Online and in-person. Enrollment at PDI Center, 7124 S. I-35 Service Rd., OKC. Call (405) 682-7873 or visit occc.edu/coe/online-academy. Also provides ESL and career readiness.
Metro Technology Centers (Metro Tech) Adult Education Free AEFL/GED/ESL classes at multiple OKC-area campuses. 7777 S. May Avenue, OKC (also GED and HiSET test center). metrotech.edu/programs-classes/aefl
Union Adult Learning Center (UAL) — Tulsa All classes free of charge. Grant-funded by Oklahoma AEFL. Quarterly enrollment. Serves Tulsa, Claremore, Muskogee, Owasso, and Pryor. GED and HiSET preparation. All classes taught by Oklahoma certified teachers. ualc.unionps.org
Great Plains Technology Center AEFL — Lawton Free adult education and GED/HiSET prep. 4500 SW Lee Blvd., Lawton. Testing services available. greatplains.edu/short-term-classes/aefl | GED success stories: graduates have joined the Army, enrolled at Rose State College.
Catholic Charities of Eastern Oklahoma — Tulsa HiSET preparation program in English and Spanish. Morning and evening classes Tuesday and Thursday. 2450 N. Harvard Ave., Tulsa. Call (918) 508-7102. Also ESL and citizenship prep. cceok.org/education/
Oklahoma City Metro Literacy Coalition Free GED and HiSET prep classes online and at multiple OKC locations. HiSET prep classes at 3033 N. Walnut Ave., OKC (also registered HiSET test center). GED and HiSET test center at 7777 S. May Ave. Call (405) 524-7323 or visit communityliteracy.com
Norman Public Schools — Norman GED/HiSET classes at Norman Central Library, 103 W. Acres St. and Dimensions Academy, 809 N. Findlay, Norman. Contact Mary Ellen Davis: (405) 366-1059 | normanpublicschools.org
OIC of Tulsa (Oklahoma) HiSET prep classes for students 16+. Daytime, evening, and online. 3033 N. Walnut Ave., OKC. $25 enrollment fee. (405) 235-2651 | oicokc.org/highschooldipprep
TEEM (Tulsa) Helps those impacted by the criminal justice system. GED/HiSET referrals. (405) 235-5671 | teem.org
All 32 Oklahoma AEFL Providers Find your county’s approved classes at: oklahoma.gov/careertech/educators/adult-education-and-family-literacy/students/classes.html | AEFL main contact: oklahoma.gov/careertech AEFL page | Oklahoma CareerTech: 1500 W 7th Ave., Stillwater, OK 74074-4398 | Office hours: 8 AM–4:30 PM Mon–Fri

Free Practice Test Resources

Resource Where to Access
GED Free Test Previews ged.com/study/free-online-ged-test.html — free short subject previews
GED Official Practice Questions ged.com/study/practice-questions.html — official sample questions with explanations
GED Ready Practice Test (~$7.99/subject) Required for GED online testing; highly recommended for in-person. Available at GED.com.
HiSET Free Practice Tests hiset.org/prepare-for-your-test/practice-tests/ — free HiSET practice tests and sample questions
HiSET Academy by Essential Education Free and paid HiSET prep aligned to current exam standards at essentialed.com
Prepsaret.com  Free and premium prep test materials and video lessons aligned to GED and HiSET content areas
GED Mobile App Free iOS and Android — official GED app with study tools and practice questions
Oklahoma Public Libraries Many Oklahoma public libraries offer free Learning Express Library access with full GED and HiSET practice tests — ask your branch librarian

Oklahoma GED and HiSET Testing Centers

Oklahoma has approved testing centers in all major regions. GED centers operate through Pearson VUE; HiSET centers operate through PSI Services. Some sites are registered for both exams.

City Exam Type Center and Contact
Oklahoma City GED and HiSET Metro Technology Centers — 7777 S. May Avenue, OKC 73159 | (405) 424-8324
Oklahoma City HiSET OKC Metro Literacy Coalition / OIC — 3033 N. Walnut Avenue, Bldg East, OKC 73105
Oklahoma City GED 12777 N. Rockwell, Oklahoma City 73162
Tulsa GED and HiSET Union Adult Learning Center / multiple Tulsa-area sites | ualc.unionps.org
Lawton GED and HiSET Great Plains Technology Center — 4500 SW Lee Blvd., Lawton | greatplains.edu

For a complete, current list of all GED testing centers in Oklahoma: log in to GED.com and use the test center locator. For HiSET testing centers: log in at hiset.org/oklahoma/ and use the testing center search. The official ODCTE list is also available at oklahoma.gov/careertech AEFL testing page.

How to Pass Your GED or HiSET Fast

The average preparation time is 2 to 3 months for both exams. Oklahoma’s no-residency-requirement means you can test at the most convenient Oklahoma center even if you live near the state line. Here is what consistently works.

30-Day Study Blueprint (Applies to Both GED and HiSET)

Week Focus and Activities
Week 1: Assess and enroll Take free GED practice previews (ged.com) or free HiSET practice tests (hiset.org) in all subjects. Identify weakest areas. Enroll at your nearest Oklahoma AEFL program (free or low-cost). Decide GED vs. HiSET if you have not already. Check HiSET fees for April 2026 increase impact.
Week 2: Deep subject work Focus on Math (most commonly failed subject in both exams). GED: algebra, linear equations, graphs. HiSET: arithmetic, algebra, data analysis. Begin Language Arts — practice reading passages, identifying arguments. For HiSET: practice Writing essay separately as it is its own subtest.
Week 3: Full practice + timed tests Take one full timed practice test per subject. Address weak areas immediately. For GED: practice the 45-min Extended Response argumentative essay. For HiSET: practice Part 1 (multiple choice) and Part 2 (essay) Writing subtest separately. Verify tech setup for online testing.
Week 4: GED Ready/HiSET practice + schedule GED: take GED Ready practice test (~$7.99) — required for online testing, strongly recommended for in-person. HiSET: take the official HiSET practice test. If results show readiness, schedule your official exam. Start with your strongest subject first.

HiSET-Specific Tips for Oklahoma

Language Arts Writing: Unique to HiSET

The HiSET has a separate Writing subtest (Part 1: multiple choice grammar/usage, 75 minutes; Part 2: written essay, 45 minutes). This is different from the GED where Writing is embedded in RLA. Practice each part separately. For the essay: use two source passages provided in the test to write a 5-paragraph argumentative or informational essay. Aim for 400+ organized words. A score of 2/6 minimum on the essay is required to pass the Writing subtest. 

Mathematics: HiSET Advantage

The HiSET Math has a somewhat lower difficulty level than GED Math — it covers a broader range of topics but with lower passing thresholds (8/20 vs. GED’s 145/200). A calculator is allowed for HiSET Math. Focus on: arithmetic fundamentals, ratios and proportions, basic algebra, and data interpretation from graphs and charts. Review geometry formulas provided on the formula sheet.

GED-Specific Tips for Oklahoma

Mathematical Reasoning 

Part 1 of GED Math is calculator-free (about 6 questions). Focus on mental math, basic arithmetic, and estimation. Part 2 allows an on-screen calculator. High-yield areas: linear equations, algebraic reasoning, graphs and data interpretation, basic geometry. Work through at least 30 word problems before test day.

Reasoning Through Language Arts

The GED RLA combines Reading and Writing in one 150-minute test. The Extended Response essay is 45 minutes — write an argumentative essay using provided source passages. Use the 3-step process: (1) read both passages and identify the main argument, (2) outline your position with text evidence, (3) write a clear 4-paragraph essay. Aim for 300+ organized words. Write at least 3-4 practice essays before test day.

Day-of-Test Checklist

  • Bring valid, non-expired government-issued photo ID with name, date of birth, signature, and photograph
  • For 16-17 year-olds: AEFL Release Form for Minors must be submitted to the test center BEFORE your test day
  • Leave phone, smart watch, notes, food, and drinks outside the testing room
  • For online testing: log in early; complete webcam and ID verification; ensure testing space is private and quiet
  • For under-18 online testing: parent or guardian must be present at the online pre-test check-in
  • For the GED essay or HiSET essay: spend 5 minutes outlining your argument before writing

Oklahoma HSE Transcripts and Diplomas

GED Diploma and Transcript

  • Oklahoma partners with GED Testing Service for fulfillment of GED transcripts and diplomas through Parchment
  • After passing all 4 GED subjects: you automatically receive one free electronic diploma and one free electronic transcript — emailed to your GED.com account address
  • Download links are time-limited — download your documents immediately upon receipt
  • For requests for additional copies or paper diplomas, log in to your GED.com account or visit Parchment
  • GED State Administrator: Lance Allee | (405) 880-5235 | 1500 West Seventh Ave., Stillwater, OK 74074-4398

HiSET Diploma and Transcript

After Your Diploma: What’s Next in Oklahoma?

  • Apply to any accredited Oklahoma community college, career technology center, or four-year university — the Oklahoma High School Diploma satisfies all standard admission requirements
  • Apply for FAFSA federal financial aid — your diploma makes you eligible for federal financial aid
  • If you scored 165+ on GED (College Ready), ask your Oklahoma college about bypassing placement testing
  • If you scored 175+ on any GED subject (College Ready + Credit), contact your college about earning college credits through the ACE CREDIT program
  • If you are interested in the Oklahoma Career Readiness Diploma program, contact Mikaila Intemann at [email protected] or (405) 743-5556
  • Contact your nearest Oklahoma Works Career Center for WIOA-funded career training and job placement services

What Can You Do With an Oklahoma High School Diploma?

Legal Equivalence in Oklahoma

The Oklahoma High School Diploma earned through the GED or HiSET is legally equivalent to a traditional Oklahoma high school diploma. It is accepted by all Oklahoma employers, all Oklahoma colleges and universities, all branches of the U.S. military, and all federal employment programs. The GED and HiSET are each recognized by 98% of U.S. colleges and employers.

 

Opportunity Details
Employment Energy industry (oil and gas), healthcare, agriculture, logistics, retail, government — most Oklahoma entry-level and many professional positions require a high school diploma or equivalent
Military service All U.S. Armed Forces branches accept the Oklahoma High School Diploma; Tinker AFB, Fort Sill, Vance AFB, and other Oklahoma installations accept GED- and HiSET-credentialed recruits
Oklahoma community colleges All Oklahoma community colleges and career technology centers — Rose State College, Tulsa Community College, OCCC, Redlands CC, and others — accept the Oklahoma High School Diploma for standard admission
Oklahoma state universities University of Oklahoma, Oklahoma State University, East Central University, Northeastern State, University of Central Oklahoma, and all Oklahoma state universities accept the diploma for admission
Healthcare CNA programs, medical assistant, pharmacy technician, EMT training — most Oklahoma healthcare training programs require a high school diploma or equivalent
Energy industry Oklahoma’s dominant oil, gas, and wind energy sectors — many entry-level field and technical positions require GED or equivalent
Federal employment All federal positions at Oklahoma federal facilities (Tinker AFB, VA facilities, USDA, BIA) that require a high school diploma accept the Oklahoma High School Diploma
Career Technology Centers Oklahoma’s 29 technology center districts offer certificate and associate programs. The Oklahoma HS Diploma satisfies admissions requirements for all tech center programs.
GED College Credit (175+) GED scores of 175+ on any subject may earn up to 3 college credits per subject through the ACE CREDIT program — unique advantage over the HiSET

Oklahoma HiSET Alternative: FAQs

Does Oklahoma offer the HiSET?

Yes. Oklahoma is one of a small number of states that offers both the GED and the HiSET. Both exams lead to the same Oklahoma High School Diploma, issued by the Oklahoma Department of Education. You choose which exam to take based on your preference, cost considerations, and learning style.

Which is better in Oklahoma, GED or HiSET?

Both lead to the same credential. The GED has score tiers (College Ready, College Ready + Credit) that can earn college credits — a unique advantage the HiSET does not have. The HiSET has a more favorable retake fee structure (2nd and 3rd retakes cost only $12.50 at a test center) and offers paper testing as an option. 

The HiSET also has slightly lower passing thresholds. For most test-takers planning to attend college, the GED’s College Ready score tiers provide significant upside. For test-takers who prefer paper-based testing or have already studied extensively for the HiSET, the HiSET may be the better choice. You cannot combine scores from both exams.

Do I need to be an Oklahoma resident to take the GED or HiSET?

No. Oklahoma has no residency requirement for either the GED or the HiSET. Non-residents of Oklahoma can take either exam at any Oklahoma-approved test center. This is one of Oklahoma’s most distinctive and favorable policies — especially valuable for residents of neighboring states where options may be more limited.

What is the AEFL Release Form for Minors?

The AEFL Release Form for Minors is Oklahoma’s required documentation form for all 16 and 17-year-old test-takers seeking to take either the GED or HiSET. The form must be submitted to the test center before scheduling your exam. 

It verifies that the student is not enrolled in school and documents parental and school district approval. Download the form at oklahoma.gov/careertech AEFL forms page or directly from hiset.org/oklahoma/. For GED: the historical form also requires a superintendent’s concurrence.

What is the Oklahoma Career Readiness Diploma?

The Oklahoma Career Readiness Diploma is a new program (launched early 2026) that allows adults who have past academic achievements — including old GED section scores, high school credits, or prior test attempts — to earn an Oklahoma career readiness credential through 12 hours at an Adult Learning Center. 

The 12-hour program focuses on professional resume writing, interview preparation, and career coaching. Contact Mikaila Intemann at [email protected] or (405) 743-5556 to find the nearest participating AEFL program.

Can I take the HiSET online at home in Oklahoma?

Yes. Oklahoma offers the HiSET @Home option for at-home online proctored testing. The cost is $48.50 per subtest ($242.50 total for all 5) before the April 1, 2026 fee increase. Unlike GED online testing, no practice test is required before scheduling HiSET @Home. 

You need a computer, webcam, stable internet connection, and a private workspace. System requirements are at psiexams.com. Under-18 testers must still submit the AEFL Release Form for Minors to a test center before scheduling. 

What does the HiSET fee increase mean for Oklahoma test-takers?

HiSET is implementing a fee increase effective April 1, 2026. This affects all new HiSET scheduling in Oklahoma. If you are planning to take the HiSET and want to lock in the pre-increase prices, schedule your tests before April 1, 2026. After April 1, verify the current fees at hiset.org/oklahoma/ before scheduling. The increase applies to all HiSET testing options (paper, computer, @Home) in Oklahoma.

How do I get my Oklahoma High School Diploma and transcript?

For GED: after passing all 4 subjects, you automatically receive a free electronic diploma and transcript via Parchment, emailed to your GED.com account address. 

Download immediately — links are time-limited. For HiSET: after passing all 5 subtests, check your email for instructions on accessing official documents through Parchment at parchment.my.site.com. 

For any issues, contact GED Admin Lance Allee at (405) 880-5235 or the AEFL office at oklahoma.gov/careertech .

Final Thoughts: GED Your Oklahoma HiSET Alternative

Oklahoma is one of the most flexible high school equivalency states in the country — offering both the GED and the HiSET, requiring no residency to test, having no mandatory prep class requirement, and maintaining free or low-cost AEFL programs in every county. 

The brand-new Oklahoma Career Readiness Diploma adds yet another pathway for adults with prior academic achievements who need a different path to a credential.

Whether you choose the GED (with its college credit score tiers and single-score system) or the HiSET (with its paper testing option and favorable retake fee structure), 32 free AEFL programs across Oklahoma stand ready to help you prepare. 

The Oklahoma High School Diploma you earn is the same regardless of which exam you pass — it opens every door in Oklahoma and nationwide.

Your Action Plan — Start Today

1. Decide: GED or HiSET? Review the comparison table in Section 2. If unsure, GED is generally preferred if you plan to pursue college credit; HiSET if you prefer paper testing or have prior HiSET study prep.

2. Check if the HiSET fee increase (April 1, 2026) affects your timing — verify current fees at hiset.org/oklahoma/

3. If 16 or 17: obtain and complete the AEFL Release Form for Minors from oklahoma.gov/careertech AEFL forms. Submit to your test center before scheduling.

4. For GED: create a free account at GED.com | For HiSET: create a myHiSET account at test-takers.psiexams.com/hisetoklahoma/auth/login

5. Find a free AEFL adult education program in your county: oklahoma.gov/careertech/educators/adult-education-and-family-literacy/students/classes.html

6. Study using free practice tests: GED — ged.com/study/free-online-ged-test.html | HiSET — hiset.org/prepare-for-your-test/practice-tests/

7. Schedule and take your exam(s) — GED at $41/subject, HiSET at $33/subtest (in-person, pre-April 2026)

8. If you have old GED or HiSET scores, or prior work/life experience: contact the Oklahoma Career Readiness Diploma program: [email protected] | (405) 743-5556

Oklahoma AEFL / GED Admin (Lance Allee): (405) 880-5235 | Oklahoma Dept. of Career and Technology Education | 1500 W. 7th Ave., Stillwater, OK 74074-4398 | Office: 8 AM–4:30 PM Mon–Fri

Career Readiness Diploma: Mikaila Intemann | (405) 743-5556 | [email protected]

GED Helpline: 1-877-EXAM-GED (1-877-392-6433)

AEFL Approved Classes by County: oklahoma.gov/careertech/educators/adult-education-and-family-literacy/students/classes.html

30-Credit Diploma Pathway: Oklahoma Dept. of Education Accreditation Standards | (405) 521-3335