(Rule 14a-101)
                     INFORMATION REQUIRED IN PROXY STATEMENT
                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

                Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14 (a) of the
                         Securities Exchange Act of 1934

Filed by the Registrant   [X]   Filed by a Party other than the Registrant  [  ]

Check the appropriate box:

[  ]     Preliminary Proxy Statement      [  ]     Confidential, For Use of the
                                                   only (as permitted by Rule 14
[X]      Definitive Proxy Statement

[  ]     Definitive Additional Materials

[  ]     Soliciting Material Pursuant to Section 240.14a-11(c) or
         Section 240.14a-12

                            BOK FINANCIAL CORPORATION
          -----------------------------------------------------------
                (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)


                       N/A (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy
                    Statement, if other than the Registrant)

Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

[X]      No fee required

[ ] Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6 (i) (4) and 0-12.

(1)      Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:

(2)      Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:

(3)      Per unit price or other underlying value or transaction computed
         pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (set forth the amount on which the
         filing fee is calculated and state how it was determined);

(4)      Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:

(5)      Total fee paid:

[  ]     Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.

[        ] Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange
         Act Rule 0-11 (a) (2) and identify the filing for which the offsetting
         fee was paid previously. Identify the previous filing by registration
         statement number, or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.

(1)       Amount Previously Paid:

(2)       Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:

(3)       Filing Party:

(4)       Date Filed:


                                 March 28, 2003


To Each Shareholder:

     You are cordially  invited to attend the Annual Meeting of  Shareholders of
BOK  Financial  Corporation  to be held this year in the Tulsa Room on the ninth
floor of the Bank of Oklahoma Tower,  One Williams  Center,  Tulsa,  Oklahoma on
Tuesday, April 29, 2003, at 11:00 a.m. local time. Details of the business to be
conducted  at the  annual  meeting  are given in the  attached  Notice of Annual
Meeting and Proxy Statement. Also enclosed is our Annual Report to Shareholders,
covering the fiscal year ended December 31, 2002.

     We hope that you will be able to attend this meeting, but all shareholders,
whether or not they expect to attend the  meeting,  are  requested  to complete,
date and sign the  enclosed  proxy and  return it in the  enclosed  envelope  as
promptly as possible.

     We look forward to seeing you at the meeting.


                                            Sincerely,

                                            /s/ George B. Kaiser
                                            George B. Kaiser, Chairman of the
                                            Board of Directors

                                            /s/ Stanley A. Lybarger
                                            Stanley A. Lybarger, President and
                                            Chief Executive Officer







     IF YOU PLAN TO  ATTEND  THE 2003  ANNUAL  MEETING  OF  SHAREHOLDERS  OF BOK
FINANCIAL  CORPORATION,  PLEASE  TAKE  NOTE OF THE  FOLLOWING:  DUE TO  SECURITY
MEASURES IN PLACE AT THE BANK OF OKLAHOMA TOWER, IT WILL BE NECESSARY FOR YOU TO
CHECK IN AT THE WILLIAMS SECURITY DESK ON THE PLAZA LEVEL OF THE TOWER. YOU WILL
BE REQUIRED TO SURRENDER  YOUR DRIVER'S  LICENSE IN EXCHANGE FOR A VISITOR PASS.
YOUR  DRIVER'S  LICENSE WILL BE RETURNED TO YOU WHEN YOU DEPART THE BUILDING AND
RETURN THE VISITOR PASS.



                            BOK FINANCIAL CORPORATION

                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
                          TO BE HELD ON APRIL 29, 2003


Each Shareholder:

     Notice is hereby  given that the  Annual  Meeting  of  Shareholders  of BOK
Financial Corporation,  an Oklahoma corporation,  will be held in the Tulsa Room
on the ninth floor of the Bank of Oklahoma Tower,  One Williams  Center,  Tulsa,
Oklahoma on April 29, 2003, at 11:00 am. local time, for the following purposes:

     1.   To fix the number of directors to be elected at twenty-six (26) and to
          elect  twenty-six  (26) persons as directors for a term of one year or
          until their successors have been elected and qualified;

     2.   To approve the BOKF 2003 Stock Option Plan and the existing BOKF 1993,
          1994, 1997, 2000 and 2001 Stock Option Plans;

     3.   To approve the Executive Performance-Based Compensation Plan; and

     4.   To transact such other  business as may properly be brought before the
          Annual Meeting or any adjournment or adjournments thereof.

     The  meeting  may be  adjourned  from time to time and,  at any  reconvened
meeting,  action  with  respect to the matters  specified  in this notice may be
taken without further notice to shareholders unless required by the Bylaws.

     The Board recommends that shareholders vote FOR the director nominees named
in the accompanying proxy statement and FOR proposals two and three.

     Only  shareholders  of record at the close of  business  on March 14,  2003
shall be entitled to receive  notice of, and to vote at, the annual  meeting.  A
complete list of shareholders  entitled to vote will be available for inspection
at our offices, Bank of Oklahoma Tower, One Williams Center, Tulsa 74172.


                           BY   ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS


                           /s/ Frederic Dorwart
                           FREDERIC DORWART, SECRETARY


MARCH 28, 2003



                            BOK FINANCIAL CORPORATION
                             BANK OF OKLAHOMA TOWER
                              TULSA, OKLAHOMA 74172

               PROXY STATEMENT FOR ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

                            To Be Held April 29, 2003


GENERAL

     The enclosed  proxy is solicited on behalf of the Board of Directors of BOK
Financial Corporation for use at our annual meeting of shareholders.  The annual
meeting will be held on Tuesday, April 29, 2003, at 11:00 a.m. local time in the
Tulsa  Room on the  ninth  floor of the Bank of  Oklahoma  Tower,  One  Williams
Center, Tulsa, Oklahoma.

     These proxy  materials will be mailed on or about March 28, 2003 to holders
of record of common stock as of the close of business on March 14, 2003.

VOTING BY PROXY

     You may vote at the annual meeting by completing, signing and returning the
enclosed  proxy  card.  If not  revoked,  your proxy will be voted at the annual
meeting in accordance  with your  instructions  marked on the proxy card. If you
fail to mark your proxy with instructions, your proxy will be voted as follows:

     o    FOR the election of the twenty-six  (26) nominees for director  listed
          in this Proxy Statement,

     o    To approve the BOKF 2003 Stock Option Plan and the existing BOKF 1993,
          1994, 1997, 2000 and 2001 Stock Option Plans, and

     o    To approve the Executive Performance-Based Compensation Plan.

     As to any other  matter  that may be  properly  brought  before  the annual
meeting,  your proxy will be voted as the Board of Directors may  recommend.  If
the Board of Directors makes no recommendation,  your proxy will be voted as the
proxy  holder  named in your proxy card deem  advisable.  The Board of Directors
does  not  know  of any  other  matter  that is  expected  to be  presented  for
consideration at the annual meeting.

VOTING AND QUORUM REQUIREMENTS AT THE MEETING

     Only  holders of shares of common  stock at the close of  business on March
14, 2003 (the "record date") are entitled to notice of and to vote at the annual
meeting.  On the record  date,  there  were  55,222,789  shares of common  stock
entitled to vote.

     You will have one vote for each  share of common  stock  held by you on the
record date.

     In order to have a meeting it is  necessary  that a quorum be present.  The
presence in person or by proxy of the holders of  one-third  of the  outstanding
shares  of common  stock is  necessary  to  constitute  a quorum  at the  annual
meeting.  Abstentions  and broker  non-votes  will be counted  for  purposes  of
determining  the  presence  or  absence  of a  quorum.  Abstentions  and  broker
non-votes will not be counted as having voted either for or against a proposal.

     The affirmative  vote of the holders of a majority of the shares present or
represented  at the meeting in which a quorum is present that  actually vote for
or against the matter is required to approve proposals two and three.  Directors
are elected by a plurality  vote,  meaning  that the  twenty-six  (26)  nominees
receiving the highest number of votes FOR will be elected as directors.

     George B. Kaiser  currently  owns  approximately  68.2% of the  outstanding
common stock and plans to vote in person at the meeting.

SOLICITATION OF PROXIES

     We are paying for all our costs  incurred  in  soliciting  proxies  for the
annual  meeting.  In addition to solicitation by mail, we may use our directors,
officers  and regular  employees to solicit  proxies by telephone or  otherwise.
These personnel will not be specifically compensated for these services. We will
pay persons  holding  shares of common stock for the benefit of others,  such as
nominees,  brokerage houses,  banks, and other  fiduciaries,  for the expense of
forwarding solicitation materials to the beneficial owner.

ANNUAL REPORT

     Our Annual Report to Shareholders,  covering the fiscal year ended December
31, 2002, including audited financial  statements,  is enclosed. No parts of the
Annual  Report are  incorporated  in this Proxy  Statement or are deemed to be a
part of the material for the solicitation of proxies.

SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT

     As of March 14, 2003,  there were 55,222,789  shares of common stock issued
and outstanding. Mr. Kaiser is the only shareholder known by BOK Financial to be
the beneficial  owner of more than five percent (5%) of its  outstanding  common
stock.  The following  table sets forth,  as of March 14, 2003,  the  beneficial
ownership of common stock of BOK  Financial,  by each director and nominee,  the
chief executive  officer (Mr.  Lybarger) and the four other  executive  officers
named in the Summary  Compensation  Table appearing at page 19 below,  and, as a
group, all of such persons and other executive officers not named in the table.

                                AMOUNT AND NATURE OF
NAME OF BENEFICIAL OWNER        BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP(1)      PERCENT OF CLASS(2)
------------------------        --------------------         ----------------

C. Fred Ball, Jr.                            62,432(3)                *
Sharon J. Bell                               79,824(4)                *
Peter C. Boylan, III                          1,220                   *
Joseph E. Cappy                               2,315                   *
Luke R. Corbett                               1,482                   *
William E. Durrett                          133,564(5)                *
Paul M. Elvir                                28,918(6)                *
James O. Goodwin                                693                   *
Robert G. Greer                              61,276(7)                *
David F. Griffin                             36,568                   *
V. Burns Hargis                              35,654(8)                *
E. Carey Joullian, IV                         5,542(9)                *
George B. Kaiser                         42,071,773(10)             68.2%
David L. Kyle                                 1,490                   *
Robert J. LaFortune                         137,517                   *
Philip C. Lauinger, Jr.                       3,689(11)               *
John C. Lopez                                 2,313                   *
Stanley A. Lybarger                         264,723(12)(13)           *
Steven J. Malcolm                               230                   *
Paula Marshall-Chapman                            0                   *
Frank A. McPherson                            3,776                   *
Steven E. Moore                               1,658                   *
J. Larry Nichols                              1,991                   *
Robert L. Parker, Sr.                         4,696(14)               *
W. Jeffrey Pickryl                           35,559(15)               *
James A. Robinson                            34,559                   *
L. Francis Rooney, III                      714,609(16)              1.3
Scott F. Zarrow                               4,322(17)               *

All directors, nominees and              43,732,393                 70.5
executive officers as a group
(28 persons including the above)

* Less than one percent (1%)


(1)  Except as otherwise  indicated,  all shares are beneficially  owned and the
     sole investment and voting power is held by the person named.

(2)  All  percentages  are rounded to the nearest tenth,  and are based upon the
     number of shares  outstanding as of the date set forth above.  For purposes
     of computing the percentages of the outstanding shares owned by the persons
     described in the table, any shares such persons are deemed to own by having
     a right to acquire such shares by exercise of an option are  included,  but
     shares acquirable by other persons by the exercise of stock options are not
     included.

(3)  Includes options to purchase 46,987 shares of BOKF common stock immediately
     exercisable.  Also  includes  4,120 shares  owned by C. Fred Ball,  Jr. and
     Charlotte  Ball,  4,966  shares  owned by C. Fred Ball,  Jr. IRA, and 3,339
     shares held in the BOk Thrift Plan.

(4)  Includes  2,632 shares  owned by spouse.  Also  includes (i) 17,382  shares
     owned by the J. A. Chapman and Leta M. Chapman Trust  (1949),  of which Ms.
     Bell is  individual  trustee,  and 20,105 shares owned by the Leta McFarlin
     Chapman Trust (1974), of which Ms. Bell is co-trustee.

(5)  Includes  125,747 shares  indirectly owned by American  Fidelity  Assurance
     Company,   1,058  shares  indirectly  owned  by  CPROP,  INC.,  189  shares
     indirectly owned by CELP, and 1,485 shares indirectly owned by CAMCO.

(6)  Includes options to purchase 24,262 shares of BOKF common stock immediately
     exercisable. Also includes 2,624 shares held in the BOk Thrift Plan.

(7)  Includes 19,479 shares  indirectly owned by Robert G. Greer, IRA, and 5,934
     shares owned by Mr. Greer's spouse, Joan Philen Greer.

(8)  Includes options to purchase 31,503 shares of BOKF common stock immediately
     exercisable. Also includes 880 shares held in the BOk Thrift Plan.

(9)  Includes  2,552  shares  owned by Joullian & Co.,  Inc.  Also  includes 562
     shares  indirectly  owned as  trustee  for E. C.  Joullian  V,  562  shares
     indirectly owned as trustee for Laura L. Joullian and 562 shares indirectly
     owned as trustee for Ann P. Joullian.

(10) Mr. Kaiser's  address is P. O. Box 21468,  Tulsa,  OK 74121-1468.  Includes
     6,510,586  shares  which Mr.  Kaiser  may  acquire  through  conversion  of
     249,490,880  shares of BOK Financial  Series A Preferred  Stock.  Shares of
     Series A Preferred  Stock may be  converted  to Common Stock at any time at
     the option of the  holder,  at a ratio of 1 share of Common  Stock for each
     38.32 shares of Series A Preferred Stock which has been adjusted to account
     for the two for one stock split which was issued February 22, 1999 and also
     gives effect to the 1 for 100 reverse stock split of Common Stock  effected
     December 17, 1991 and the November  18, 1993,  November 17, 1994,  November
     27, 1995,  November 27, 1996, November 26, 1997, November 25, 1998, October
     18,  1999,  May 18,  2001 and May 13, 2002 BOKF 3% Common  Stock  Dividends
     payable by the issuance of BOKF Common Stock.

(11) Includes  142  shares  indirectly  owned  by Mr.  Lauinger  and  Claire  F.
     Lauinger.

(12) Includes  21,737 shares  indirectly  owned by Marcia Lybarger Living Trust;
     includes  7,300  shares  indirectly  owned by  Stanley  A.  Lybarger,  IRA;
     includes 2,231 shares held in the BOk Thrift Plan.

(13) Includes   options  to  purchase   169,704  shares  of  BOKF  Common  Stock
     immediately exercisable.

(14) Includes 462 shares  indirectly  owned by Mr. Parker as Co-Trustee  for the
     Robert L. Parker Trust dated February 10, 1967.

(15) Includes options to purchase 24,074 shares of BOKF common stock immediately
     exercisable.

(16) Includes 166,766 shares  indirectly owned by Rooney Brothers  Company,  492
     shares held in L. F. Rooney IRA,  540,855 shares  indirectly owned by L. F.
     Rooney Trust and 2,525  indirectly  owned by Kathleen  Rooney Trust,  L. F.
     Rooney Trust 2 of which Kathleen Rooney is individual trustee.

(17) Includes  4,263  shares  indirectly  owned by Scott F. Zarrow and Hilary I.
     Zarrow,  Co-Trustees  for  the  Scott  F.  Zarrow  Revocable  Trust,  dated
     September 29, 1995.



                                  PROPOSAL ONE

                              ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

NOMINEES AND VOTE REQUIRED TO ELECT NOMINEES

     A board  of  twenty-six  (26)  directors  is to be  elected  at the  annual
meeting.  The  twenty-six  (26)  nominees  for  director who receive the highest
number of affirmative  votes of the shares voting shall be elected as directors.
You may vote the number of shares of common  stock you own for up to  twenty-six
(26)  persons.  Unless you  otherwise  instruct by marking your proxy card,  the
proxy holders will vote the proxies received by them FOR the election of each of
the twenty-six (26) nominees named below.

     If at the time of the annual  meeting any of the  nominees is  unwilling or
unable to serve, all proxies received will be voted in favor of the remainder of
those nominated and for such substitute nominees, if any, as shall be designated
by the board and  nominated by any of the proxies  named in the  enclosed  proxy
form.  We have no reason to believe that any of the  nominees  will be unable or
unwilling to serve if elected.

TERM OF OFFICE

     The term of office of each person elected as a director will continue until
the next annual meeting of  shareholders or until his successor has been elected
and qualified.

FAMILY RELATIONSHIPS

     There are no family  relationships  by blood,  marriage or adoption between
any  director or  executive  officer of the  company  and any other  director or
executive officer of the company.

INFORMATION ABOUT NOMINEES

     Certain  information  concerning  the nominees to the Board of Directors of
the company is set forth below based on  information  supplied by the  nominees.
All  information is as of March 1, 2003. All references in this Proxy  Statement
to "BOk" shall mean Bank of Oklahoma, National Association and all references to
"BOT" shall mean Bank of Texas, National Association,  both of which are banking
subsidiaries of BOK Financial Corporation.



                                                             PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION, BUSINESS                       FIRST YEAR
                                                          EXPERIENCE DURING LAST 5 YEARS, AND                      BECAME A
NAME                              AGE                   DIRECTORSHIPS OF OTHER PUBLIC COMPANIES                    DIRECTOR
----                              ---                   ---------------------------------------                   ----------
                                                                                                               
C. Fred Ball, Jr.                  58     Chairman  of BOT;  previously,  Mr. Ball  served as  Executive  Vice       1999
                                          President  of Comerica  Bank-Texas  and later  President of Comerica
                                          Securities,  Inc.,  where he was  employed  from 1991 until  joining
                                          Bank of Texas in 1997.

Sharon J. Bell                     51     Attorney and Managing  Partner,  Rogers and Bell (Tulsa,  Oklahoma);       1993
                                          Trustee and General Counsel,  Chapman-McFarlin Interests; formerly a
                                          Director  and  President  of Red  River  Oil  Company  (oil  and gas
                                          exploration and development).



Peter C. Boylan, III               39     Director,   President  and  Chief   Operating   Officer  of  Liberty       2000
                                          Broadband  Interactive   Television,   Inc.  (broadband  interactive
                                          television  technology  company  providing  services and products to
                                          cable  and  satellite   television  operators   worldwide),   former
                                          Co-President,  Co-Chief Operating  Officer,  Member of the Office of
                                          the Chief  Executive  Officer,  and  Director  of  Gemstar-TV  Guide
                                          International,   Inc.   (media,   entertainment,    technology   and
                                          communications   company).   Prior   to  the   merger   of   Gemstar
                                          Development  Limited and TV Guide,  Inc., in 2000, Mr. Boylan served
                                          as  President,  Member of the Office of the Chairman and Director of
                                          TV Guide,  Inc. TV Guide,  Inc. was formed in 1999 when United Video
                                          Satellite Group,  Inc.,  acquired TV Guide Magazine.  Mr. Boylan had
                                          served as President,  Chief Operating  Officer,  Member of Executive
                                          Committee and Director of United Video Satellite Group, Inc.

Joseph E. Cappy                    68     Chairman and Chief  Executive  Officer of Dollar Thrifty  Automotive       2001
                                          Group (holding company that rents  automobiles to leisure  travelers
                                          through  its  subsidiaries,  Dollar  Rent A Car  Systems,  Inc.  and
                                          Thrifty   Rent-A-Car  System,   Inc.);   former  Vice  President  of
                                          DaimlerChrysler   Corporation   beginning   in   August   1987  with
                                          responsibility  for rental  car  operations  from  June,  1993 until
                                          December,  1997.  Formerly,  President,  Chief Executive Officer and
                                          Director  of  American  Motors  Corporation  and  General  Marketing
                                          Manager of Ford Motor Company's Lincoln-Mercury Division.

Paula Marshall-Chapman             49     Chief Executive Officer, The Bama Companies,  Inc. (manufacturer and      Nominee
                                          marketer of food products);  Ms. Marshall-Chapman is also a director
                                          of Helmerich and Payne,  Inc. (oil and gas drilling  contractor) and
                                          American Fidelity  Corporation  (insurance holding company).  She is
                                          also a former director of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City.

Luke R. Corbett                    56     Chairman  and Chief  Executive  Officer  of  Kerr-McGee  Corporation       1999
                                          (energy and inorganic  chemical  company).  Mr. Corbett was formerly
                                          President and Chief Operating Officer of Kerr-McGee Corporation.

William E. Durrett                 72     Senior  Chairman  of the Board and  Director  of  American  Fidelity       1991
                                          Corporation (insurance holding company), and American Fidelity
                                          Assurance Company (a registered investment advisor). Mr. Durrett is
                                          also a director of Oklahoma Gas & Electric Company and past Chairman
                                          of the Board of Integris Health.

James O. Goodwin                   63     Chief  Executive  Officer,  The  Oklahoma  Eagle  Publishing  Co. (a       1995
                                          publishing  company);  Sole  Proprietor,  Goodwin & Goodwin Law Firm
                                          (Tulsa, Oklahoma).


Robert G. Greer                    69     Vice Chairman,  Bank of Texas, N.A.; formerly Chairman of the Board,      Nominee
                                          Bank of  Tanglewood,  N.A.,  since  1996;  Chairman  of the Board of
                                          Tanglewood  Bank,  N.A.  and Vice  Chairman of the Board of Northern
                                          Trust Bank of Texas.

David F. Griffin                   38     President,  Griffin  Communications,  L.L.C.  (owns and operates CBS      Nominee
                                          affiliated television stations in Oklahoma); formerly President and
                                          General Manager, KWTV-9 (Oklahoma City).

V. Burns Hargis                    57     Vice  Chairman,  BOK Financial  and BOk and Director of BOSC,  Inc.;       1993
                                          formerly,  Attorney and Shareholder of the law firm of McAfee & Taft
                                          (Oklahoma City, Oklahoma).


E. Carey Joullian, IV              42     President and Chief  Executive  Officer of Mustang Fuel  Corporation       1995
                                          and subsidiaries; President and Manager, Joullian & Co., L.C.

George B. Kaiser                   60     Chairman  of the  Board  of BOK  Financial  and BOk;  President  and       1990
                                          principal owner of Kaiser-Francis  Oil Company  (independent oil and
                                          gas exploration and production company),  and Fountains Continuum of
                                          Care, Inc., (senior housing communities).

David L. Kyle                      50     Chairman,  President, Chief Executive Officer and Director of ONEOK,       2001
                                          Inc.  (energy  company  engaged in production,  gathering,  storage,
                                          transportation,  distribution  and  marketing  of fuels);  formerly,
                                          president and Chief Operating  Officer of ONG  Transmission  Company
                                          and   Oklahoma   Natural  Gas   Company;   Director,   American  Gas
                                          Association and Southern Gas Association.

Robert J. LaFortune                76     Self-employed   in  the   investment   and  management  of  personal       1993
                                          financial  holdings.  Mr.  LaFortune  is  also a  director  of  Apco
                                          Argentina, Inc.

Philip C. Lauinger, Jr.            67     Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Lauinger  Publishing Company       1991
                                          (investment and advisory services to business publishing  industry);
                                          previously,  Chairman  of the Board and Chief  Executive  Officer of
                                          PennWell   Corporation   (privately   held  business   magazine  and
                                          information company).

John C. Lopez                      63     Chairman,  Chief Executive  Officer and  Controlling  Owner of Lopez       1999
                                          Foods,   Inc.   (processor  of  meat  products  for  McDonald's  and
                                          Wal-Mart).

Stanley A. Lybarger                53     President  and Chief  Executive  Officer of BOK  Financial  and BOk;       1991
                                          previously  President  of BOk  Oklahoma  City  Regional  Office  and
                                          Executive  Vice President of BOk with  responsibility  for corporate
                                          banking.


Steven J. Malcolm                  54     Chairman,  President  and Chief  Executive  Officer of The  Williams       2002
                                          Companies, Inc. (energy holding company); formerly, President and
                                          Chief Executive Officer of Williams Energy Services after serving as
                                          senior vice president and general manager of Midstream Gas and
                                          Liquids for Williams Energy Services.

Frank A. McPherson                 69     Retired  Chairman  of the  Board  and  Chief  Executive  Officer  of       1996
                                          Kerr-McGee  Corporation  (energy  and  inorganic  chemical  company)
                                          (1983-1997);  Member,  Board of Directors of Integris Health,  Inc.,
                                          ConocoPhillips,  Inc., Tri-Continental Corporation, Seligman Quality
                                          Fund,  Inc.,  Seligman  Select  Municipal  Fund,  Inc., and Seligman
                                          Group of Mutual Funds.  Mr.  McPherson is also a former  director of
                                          the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City.

Steven E. Moore                    56     Chairman,  President and Chief Executive Officer of OGE Energy Corp.       1998
                                          (holding  company  for  OG&E  Electric  Services,  Enogex  Inc.  and
                                          Origen,  Inc.);   Director,   Oklahoma  City  Chamber  of  Commerce,
                                          Oklahoma State Chamber of Commerce, and Edison Electric Institute.

J. Larry Nichols                   60     Chairman of the Board,  President and Chief Executive  Officer Devon       1997
                                          Energy Corporation;  Director,  Baker Hughes,  Smedvig asa; Board of
                                          Governors for American Stock Exchange, L.L.C.

Robert L. Parker, Sr.              79     Chairman  and  Director,  Parker  Drilling Co. (oil and gas drilling       1991
                                          contractor);  Director,  Clayton Williams  Energy,  Inc. and Norwest
                                          Bank of Texas-Kerrville.

James A. Robinson                  74     Self-employed   in  the   investment   and  management  of  personal       1993
                                          financial  holdings;  formerly  engaged  in  the  practice  of  law,
                                          general counsel for BOk, and banking.

L. Francis Rooney, III             49     Chairman  of  the  Board  and  Chief  Executive  Officer,  Manhattan       1995
                                          Construction Company (construction and construction management).

Scott F. Zarrow                    45     President of Foreman Investment  Capital,  L.L.C.,  (private venture       2001
                                          capital  investment  firm). Mr. Zarrow  previously  served as Senior
                                          Vice  President  for  Sooner  Pipe and Supply  Corporation  and held
                                          numerous executive positions with its subsidiaries.



COMMITTEES; MEETINGS

     During  2002,  the Board of Directors of BOK  Financial  Corporation  had a
standing  Risk  Oversight  and  Audit  Committee  comprised  solely  of  outside
directors.  The Audit Committee is responsible for recommending the selection of
independent auditors and supervising internal auditors. The Audit Committee also
reviews the results of internal and  independent  audits and reviews  accounting
principles and practices. The Audit Committee was responsible for fulfilling the
trust audit  requirements  established  by 12 CFR ss. 9.9.  The Audit  Committee
consisted  of  Messrs.  Goodwin,  Janzen,  Joullian  (Chairman),  LaFortune  and
Lauinger.  The  Audit  Committee  met five (5)  times  during  2002.  The  Audit
Committee  intends to meet at least five (5) times in 2003. The Audit  Committee
operates  under a written  charter  adopted by the Board of Directors  which was
published in the 2001 proxy statement.

     In  December  2002,  the  Board of  Directors  established  an  Independent
Compensation Committee,  consisting of five independent directors, to administer
a performance  based  compensation plan for senior executives in accordance with
the provisions of Section 162(m) of the Internal  Revenue Code. The  Independent
Compensation  Committee consists of Messrs. Cappy,  Corbett,  Kyle, Robinson and
Rooney.  Except for performance based  compensation  which is intended to comply
with the requirements of Section 162(m),  incentive compensation is administered
by the Chief Executive  Officer and senior management as described in the Report
on Executive Compensation found on page 22 of this proxy statement.

     The Board of Directors of BOK Financial does not have a standing nominating
committee.  The Board of Directors will consider recommendations of shareholders
for  director  nominees,   but  there  is  no  established  procedure  for  such
recommendations.

     The entire Board of Directors  of BOK  Financial  met four (4) times during
2002.  All directors of BOK Financial  attended 75% of all meetings of the Board
of  Directors  and  committees  on which they  served,  except  Messrs.  Boylan,
Corbett,  Lopez,  Nichols  and  Robinson  who were  unable to attend  75% of the
meetings due to business conflicts.

REPORT OF THE RISK OVERSIGHT AND AUDIT COMMITTEE

     The Risk Oversight and Audit Committee (the Audit  Committee)  oversees BOK
Financial Corporation's (the Company's) financial reporting process on behalf of
the  Board of  Directors.  Management  has the  primary  responsibility  for the
financial statements and the reporting process including the systems of internal
controls. In fulfilling its oversight responsibilities,  the Committee discussed
and  reviewed  the  audited  financial  statements  in the  Annual  Report  with
management including a discussion of the quality, not just the acceptability, of
the accounting principles,  the reasonableness of significant judgments, and the
clarity of the disclosures in the financial statements.

     The Committee discussed and reviewed with the independent auditors, who are
responsible  for  expressing  an  opinion  on the  conformity  of those  audited
financial statements with accounting principles generally accepted in the United
States,  their judgments as to the quality,  not just the acceptability,  of the
Company's  accounting  principles  and such other  matters as are required to be
discussed with the Committee under auditing standards  generally accepted in the
United States,  including Statement of Auditing Standards No. 61, Communications
with Audit  Committees.  In  addition,  the  Committee  has  discussed  with the
independent auditors the auditors'  independence from management and the Company
including the matters in the written  disclosures  required by the  Independence
Standards Board as required by Independence  Standards Board Standard No. 1. The
Committee has also considered  whether any non-audit  services  performed by the
independent auditors is compatible with maintaining the auditor's independence.

     The  Committee  discussed  with  the  Company's  internal  and  independent
auditors the overall scope and plans for their respective  audits. The Committee
meets with the internal and  independent  auditors  with and without  management
present, to discuss the results of their examinations,  their evaluations of the
Company's  internal  controls,  and  the  results  of  the  Company's  financial
reporting.

     Each of the members of the Audit  Committee  qualifies as an  "independent"
Director  under the current  listing  standards of the National  Association  of
Securities Dealers (NASD).

     In reliance on the reviews and discussions referred to above, the Committee
recommended  to the Board of  Directors  (and the Board has  approved)  that the
audited  financial  statements be included in the Annual Report on Form 10-K for
the year ended  December 31, 2002,  for filing with the  Securities and Exchange
Commission.  The Committee and the Board have also  recommended the selection of
the Company's independent auditors.

James O. Goodwin
Howard Janzen
E. Carey Joullian IV, Committee Chairman
Robert J. LaFortune
Philip C. Lauinger, Jr.

     The  following  table  provides  the various fees and  out-of-pocket  costs
billed by Ernst & Young, LLP for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2002:


                      FINANCIAL INFORMATION SYSTEMS           ALL OTHER
        AUDIT FEES    DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION FEES            FEES*
        ----------    ------------------------------          ---------
         $375,000                 ___                         $274,827

         *Includes audit related fees of $196,050 and non-audit fees of $78,777.

     The Audit  Committee of the Board of Directors has  considered  whether the
provision  of Ernst  &Young LLP of all other  services  included in the fees set
forth in the table above under "All Other Fees" is compatible  with  maintaining
the independence of Ernst & Young LLP.

     The Audit Committee has also met and discussed with management and with its
legal and accounting  advisors the new rules and regulations  under the recently
adopted Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 and related SEC and Nasdaq rules.

COMPENSATION OF DIRECTORS

     All  non-officer  directors  of BOK  Financial  and BOk  receive  a  single
retainer  of $7,500 per year,  payable  quarterly  in  arrears in BOK  Financial
common stock in accordance  with the BOKF  Directors  Stock  Compensation  Plan,
whether serving on one or more of the boards of directors. Director compensation
shares are issued to each  director on or before the 15th day  following the end
of each calendar  quarter  during which such director  served as a member of the
Board  of  Directors  of  BOK  Financial  or  BOk.  The  BOKF  Directors   Stock
Compensation  Plan further  provides  that the  issuance  price for the director
compensation  shares is the average of the mid-points  between the highest price
and the lowest price at which trades occurred on NASDAQ on the five trading days
immediately preceding the end of the calendar quarter. All non-officer directors
also are paid $250 in cash for each  board of  directors  or  committee  meeting
attended  (provided  only  one fee is paid  when  two or  more  committees  meet
contemporaneously)  and $500 in cash for each committee meeting chaired. No such
fees are paid for meetings not attended.


                                  PROPOSAL TWO

                 APPROVAL OF THE BOKF 2003 STOCK OPTION PLAN AND
        EXISTING BOKF 1993, 1994, 1997, 2000 AND 2001 STOCK OPTION PLANS

     The Board of Directors is proposing for shareholder  approval the BOKF 2003
Stock Option Plan (the "2003 Plan") and the existing BOKF 1993, 1994, 1997, 2000
and 2001  stock  option  plans  (the  "Existing  Plans").  The 2003 Plan and the
Existing  Plans,  as amended,  (collectively,  the  "Plans") are the same in all
material  respects except with a few provisions of the 2001 Plan as noted below.
Certain of the  principal  features of the plans are described  below.  The full
text of the 2003 Plan is annexed as  Appendix  A and is  incorporated  herein by
reference. You may obtain a copy of the Existing Plans, as amended, by sending a
written  request to our Chief Financial  Officer at Bank of Oklahoma Tower,  One
Williams Center, Tulsa, Oklahoma 74172.

     The  Company  is  seeking  shareholder  approval  of the  Plans to  qualify
portions   of  the   compensation   paid   under   the   plans   as   "qualified
performance-based  compensation"  as defined in Section  162(m) of the  Internal
Revenue  Code.   The  Board  of  Directors   believes  that  the  Plans  benefit
shareholders  by continuing the tradition of linking  executive  compensation to
Company  performance and by qualifying  amounts paid pursuant to the Plans for a
U.S.  federal income tax deduction.  SHAREHOLDERS ARE URGED TO READ THE PLANS IN
THEIR ENTIRETY BEFORE CASTING THEIR VOTES.

GENERAL TERMS OF STOCK OPTION PLANS

     o    RESERVED  SHARES.  A total of  2,000,000  shares of  common  stock are
          reserved for issuance in connection with the exercise of stock options
          granted under the 2003 Plan. As of March 1, 2003, no options have been
          granted  under the 2003 Plan. A total of  6,451,653  options have been
          awarded  under  the  Existing  Plans of which  3,510,689  options  are
          outstanding  as of March 1, 2003. A  sufficient  number of shares have
          been  reserved for issuance in  connection  with the exercise of stock
          options granted under the Existing Plans.

     o    ADMINISTRATION.  Except for  performance-based  compensation  which is
          intended  to  comply  with  the  requirements  of  Section  162(m)  as
          discussed in Proposal Three, the stock options are administered by the
          Chief Executive Officer and senior management.

     o    ELIGIBILITY.  All employees of BOKF and its  subsidiaries are eligible
          to be designated as participants  and awarded options under the Plans.
          Participants are designated  based upon a subjective  determination of
          the present and potential contributions of the employee to the success
          of the  Company.  Except for options  intended to comply with  Section
          162(m),  those  employees  to whom  stock  option  awards are made are
          selected  by the  Chairman  of the  Board of  Directors  and the Chief
          Executive Officer.

     o    PURCHASE PRICE. The per share option price is the fair market value of
          the Company's common stock on NASDAQ on the date of the award letter.

     o    MAXIMUM SHARES.  The maximum number of options which may be granted to
          any one participant during a calendar year period is 100,000.

     o    VESTING.  One-seventh  of each  award of  options  vests  and  becomes
          exercisable on each anniversary of the award date,  except with regard
          to those options granted pursuant to the 2001 Plan which vest in their
          entirety on the second anniversary of the award date.

     o    EXPIRATION. Options must be exercised within three years of vesting or
          they expire,  except with regard to the 2001 Plan which  requires that
          options must be exercised within 45 days of vesting or they expire.

     o    NON-TRANSFERABILITY.   The  options  may  not  be  sold,  transferred,
          pledged,  assigned or otherwise  alienated or hypothecated,  except by
          will or by the laws of descent and distribution.

     o    TERMINATION.  If the employment of the participant  terminates for any
          reason,  including  death,  disability,   retirement,  resignation  or
          involuntary  termination,   the  participant's  options  automatically
          terminate except:

          o    if the Chairman of the Board and the Chief Executive Officer,  in
               their sole discretion,  subject to approval by the Board,  extend
               the participants options;

          o    if  termination  is  by  reason  of  death  or  disability,   the
               participant (or the participant's  personal  representative)  may
               purchase any of participants  option shares which the participant
               had the right to purchase  immediately  preceding the date of the
               participant's termination of employment; or

          o    if the  participant  is  involuntarily  terminated  without cause
               within one year of a change in control,  as defined in the Plans,
               the  participant  may purchase,  within 90 days of  participant's
               termination of employment, all of participant's option shares.

     o    AMENDMENT.  The Board of Directors may amend or terminate the Plan but
          no amendment or  termination  shall  affect the  participant's  rights
          under a previously  granted  stock  option  without the consent of the
          participant.

     o    TAX EFFECTS.  The Plans are not qualified  under Section 401(a) of the
          Internal  Revenue Code.  The following is only a summary of the effect
          of federal income taxation upon employees and the Company with respect
          to  compensation  under the Plans.  It does not purport to be complete
          and does not  discuss the tax  consequences  arising in the context of
          the employee's death or the income tax laws of any municipality, state
          or  foreign  country  in which  the  employee's  income or gain may be
          taxable. Generally, the tax effects are:

          o    Provided   that   compensation   (other  than   performance-based
               compensation  qualified  under Section 162(m)) does not exceed $1
               million for each of the corporation's chief executive officer and
               four most highly  compensated  executive  officers other than the
               chief  executive  officer,  the  Company  will be  entitled to an
               income tax  deduction  at the date of  exercise of the options by
               the  participants.  The amount of the deduction  will be equal to
               the spread  between the fair market value of the option stock (as
               quoted by NASDAQ) and the exercise price of the option.

          o    Participants will recognize income at the date of exercise of the
               Options  in an amount  equal to the  deduction  allowed as stated
               above. Income recognized due to the exercise of an option will be
               subject to withholding  and reported to the employee on form W-2.
               Participants   will  not  be  subject  to  any   further   income
               recognition  until a taxable  transaction  occurs  involving  the
               purchased  stock.  The  basis  in the  stock is equal to the fair
               market  value at the date of  exercise,  and future  transactions
               will be subject to capital asset rules.

VOTE REQUIRED

     The  affirmative  vote of the holders of a majority of the shares of common
stock,  present in person or by proxy,  voted at the  meeting,  is required  for
approval of the Plans.


                                 PROPOSAL THREE

           APPROVAL OF EXECUTIVE PERFORMANCE-BASED COMPENSATION PLAN

     o    SECTION  162(M) OF THE INTERNAL  REVENUE CODE.  Section  162(m) of the
          Internal Revenue Code generally limits to $1 million the amount that a
          publicly-held   company  is  allowed  to  deduct  each  year  for  the
          compensation paid to each of the corporation's chief executive officer
          and four most highly  compensated  executive  officers  other than the
          chief executive officer.  However,  performance-based  compensation is
          not  subject  to the limit.  In order to qualify as  performance-based
          compensation,  payments must be computed on the basis of an objective,
          performance-based  standard  determined  by a committee  that consists
          solely of two or more outside  directors and the material  terms under
          which the compensation is to be paid, including the performance goals,
          must be disclosed to and approved by the shareholders.

     o    INCENTIVE COMPENSATION GENERALLY.  The company employs a wide range of
          incentive compensation for its employees. Except for performance-based
          compensation  which is  intended to comply  with the  requirements  of
          Section  162(m),  such incentive  compensation  is administered by the
          Chief Executive Officer and senior management.  Incentive compensation
          that is intended to qualify as  performance-based  compensation  under
          Section  162(m)  is  administered  by  the  independent   compensation
          committee  discussed below. Except for options intended to comply with
          Section  162(m),  those employees to whom stock option awards are made
          are selected by the  Chairman of the Board of Directors  and the Chief
          Executive Officer.

     o    INDEPENDENT  COMPENSATION  COMMITTEE.  In December  2002, the Board of
          Directors   established   an   Independent   Compensation   Committee,
          consisting  of five outside  directors,  to  administer a  performance
          based  compensation  plan for senior  executives  as  required  by the
          provisions of Section 162(m). The current members of the Committee are
          Messrs.  Cappy, Kyle, Rooney,  Robinson,  and Corbett. The Independent
          Compensation  Committee,  with the  assistance of a leading  executive
          compensation   consulting  firm,  has  developed  a  performance-based
          compensation  plan called the 2003 Executive  Incentive Plan which the
          shareholders are being asked to approve.  You may obtain a copy of the
          2003  Executive  Incentive  Plan by  sending a written  request to our
          Chief  Financial  Officer  at Bank of  Oklahoma  Tower,  One  Williams
          Center, Tulsa, Oklahoma 74172.

     o    PERFORMANCE-BASED    COMPENSATION.    Performance-based   compensation
          consists  of  annual  bonus  and  long  term  incentive  compensation.
          Executives  who report  directly  to the Chief  Executive  Officer and
          other  selected  officers  approved  by the  Independent  Compensation
          Committee may  participate.  For 2003, a  participant  may earn (i) an
          annual  bonus equal to a specified  percentage  (not to exceed 50%) of
          annual salary paid in cash and (ii) long term  incentive  compensation
          paid in the manner discussed below.

          o    A  participant  will  earn an  annual  bonus  based  on a  matrix
               pursuant to which 33% of the targeted  annual bonus  compensation
               will be  earned if 80% of the goal is met,  100% of the  targeted
               bonus compensation earned if 100% of the goal is met, and 200% of
               the  targeted  bonus  compensation  earned if 120% of the goal is
               met.

          o    A  participant  will earn long term  incentive  based on a matrix
               pursuant  to  which  25%  of the  targeted  long  term  incentive
               compensation  will be earned  if the goal  less  five  percentage
               points  is  met,  100%  of  the  targeted  long  term   incentive
               compensation  will be earned if 100% of the goal is met, and 150%
               of the targeted long term compensation will be earned if the goal
               plus five percentage points is met.

          Except  in the case of an award  intended  to  qualify  under  Section
          162(m),  management may modify the performance  goals and compensation
          plan as deemed equitable or appropriate.

     o    PERFORMANCE  MEASURES.  The target  compensation,  annual  performance
          goals for bonus and long term  incentive  compensation,  and manner of
          payment of long term incentive compensation are set by the Independent
          Compensation  Committee for each  participant on an individual  basis.
          The  performance  goals are currently  based on a  combination  of (i)
          Company  earnings per share  measured  against peer group earnings per
          share and (ii) business unit  performance and attainment of individual
          goals.

          o    By achieving 120% of the Annual  Incentive  Bonus  measure,  each
               participant  will  earn  200%  of her or his  target  bonus.  The
               earnings  per share  measure is the  earnings per share growth of
               the 50th  percentile (or median) of a peer group of banks for the
               trailing  two-year period determined as of the end of the year in
               respect  of which the bonus is being  paid.  No  participant  may
               receive an Annual Incentive Bonus of more than $2,000,000.

          o    By achieving the Long Term Incentive measure plus five percentage
               points,  each  participant  will earn  150% of her or his  target
               earnings per share  incentive.  The earnings per share measure is
               the earnings per share growth of the 50th  percentile (or median)
               of a peer  group  of banks  for the  trailing  three-year  period
               determined as of the second anniversary of the end of the year in
               respect of which the compensation is being paid.

          o    The Chief Executive  Officer will assign the Company earnings and
               business unit weightings to participants on an individual  basis.
               With respect to  compensation  intended to qualify  under Section
               162m,   the  Committee   will  approve  the  weightings  and  any
               individually established goals prior to March 31.

          o    Fifty percent of the bonus and fifty  percent of any  performance
               shares issued for long term incentive compensation, calculated on
               the foregoing basis,  may be adjusted  downward at the discretion
               of   the   Independent    Compensation   Committee   based   upon
               recommendations of the Chief Executive Officer.

          Other  objectives  which may be used by the  Independent  Compensation
          Committee  are  return on equity,  total  earnings,  earnings  growth,
          return on capital,  return on assets, share price (including,  but not
          limited to growth measures and total shareholder  return),  cash flow,
          revenues,  market  share,  overhead or other expense  reductions,  and
          operating margins.

     o    ISSUANCE  OF LONG TERM  INCENTIVE  COMPENSATION.  Long Term  Incentive
          Compensation  which is  earned  by a  participant  will be paid by the
          award of options  pursuant to the BOKF 2003 Stock Option Plan,  by the
          issuance of  performance  shares,  or by a combination  of options and
          performance shares.

     o    Performance  shares will be shares of BOKF Common Stock issued  before
          March  15 of the year in  respect  of which  the long  term  incentive
          compensation is being paid.  Performance  shares will vest only on the
          fifth anniversary of the last day of the year for which the shares are
          issued.  If the  employment  of the  Executive is  terminated  for any
          reason prior to such vesting the shares will be forfeited.  The shares
          may not be sold for three years after the shares vest unless following
          such  sale,  the  Executive  would  own that  number of shares of BOKF
          Common Stock  provided  for in any  Executive  Management  BOKF Common
          Stock Ownership  Guidelines which may be established from time to time
          by the  Independent  Compensation  Committee.  Additional  performance
          shares will be issued,  or  performance  shares will be forfeited,  in
          accordance  with the performance  goals discussed  above. No more than
          30,000 performance shares may be issued in any year to a participant.

     o    Stock options will be options  issued  pursuant to the BOKF 2003 Stock
          Option Plan. The Options may not be exercised  prior to the expiration
          of the three  year  performance  period.  Additional  options  will be
          issued,  or  options  will  be  forfeited,   in  accordance  with  the
          performance goals discussed above.

VOTE REQUIRED

     The  affirmative  vote of the holders of a majority of the shares of common
stock,  present in person or by proxy,  voted at the  meeting,  is required  for
approval of the  Executive  Performance-Based  Compensation  Plan under  Section
162(m).



                      EQUITY COMPENSATION PLAN INFORMATION

     The  following  table  provides  information  about  the  Company's  equity
compensations  plans  in  effect  at  December  31,  2002,  aggregated  for  two
categories of plans:  those approved by  shareholders  and those not approved by
shareholders.  Until such time as the Company's  shareholders  approve Proposals
Two and Three in this proxy  statement,  none of the  Company's  plans have been
approved by  shareholders.  Plans included in the following table consist of the
BOKF 1993,  1994,  1997,  2000 and 2001 Stock Option Plans,  as well as the BOKF
Directors Stock Compensation Plan.

     The material  features of the BOKF Directors  Stock  Compensation  Plan are
described  in  this  proxy  statement  under  "Proposal  One -  Compensation  of
Directors." The material  features of the BOKF 1993,  1994,  1997, 2000 and 2001
Stock Option Plans are described in this proxy  statement  under "Proposal Two -
General Terms of the Stock Options Plans."




                                                                                               Number of securities
                                                                                             remaining available for
                                                                                              future issuance under
                                      Number of securities to        Weighted-average          equity compensation
                                      be issued upon exercise       exercise price of            plans (excluding
                                      of outstanding options,      outstanding options,      securities reflected( in
Plan Category                         warrants, and rights(2)    warrants, and rights(2)        the first column)(2)
-------------                         -----------------------    -----------------------     ------------------------
                                                                                           
Equity compensation plans approved
   by security holders                         None                       None                        None
Equity compensation plans not
   approved by security holders              3,042,624                   $20.90                     2,558,308(1)
                                      -----------------------    -----------------------     ------------------------
            Total                            3,042,624                   $20.90                     2,558,308


(1) Includes 501,565 shares of common stock which may be awarded pursuant to the
BOKF Directors Stock Compensation Plan.
(2) As of December 31, 2002.



                               EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

     Certain  information  concerning  the executive  officers of BOK Financial,
BOk, BOT, Bank of Albuquerque, NA and Bank of Arkansas, NA is set forth below:

     C. FRED BALL, JR., age 58, is Chairman and Chief  Executive  Officer of the
Bank of Texas and is  responsible  for all  banking  activities  in the State of
Texas for BOKF.  Before  joining Bank of Texas in 1997,  he was  Executive  Vice
President of Comerica  Bank-Texas  and later  President of Comerica  Securities,
Inc.

     STEVEN G. BRADSHAW,  age 43, is Executive Vice President of BOk, manager of
the Consumer  Banking  Department and Chairman of BOSC,  Inc.,  BOk's securities
firm.  Before  joining BOK  Financial,  Bradshaw  spent six years  managing  the
brokerage operation at Sooner Federal.  Mr. Bradshaw has been with BOK Financial
for 11 years.

     JEFFERY R. DUNN, age 40, is Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer
of Bank of Arkansas.  Prior to becoming President of Bank of Arkansas, he served
as Senior Vice President of Commercial  Lending.  He has been with BOK Financial
for 14 years.

     PAUL M. ELVIR,  age 62, is Executive  Vice President and Manager of the BOk
Operations  and  Technology  Division.  Mr. Elvir began working for BOk in July,
1997.  Previously,  Mr. Elvir was President of Liberty Payments  Services,  Inc.
("LPSI"),  a subsidiary  of Banc One Services  Corporation.  Prior to serving as
President of LPSI,  Mr. Elvir served as an Executive  Vice President of Banc One
Services Corporation.

     MARK W. FUNKE,  age 47, is  President,  BOk  Oklahoma  City and  Commercial
Banking Manager, Oklahoma City. Mr. Funke is also responsible for BOk's Business
Banking Group, which manages BOk's statewide small business banking efforts, and
all of its Community Banking Offices. He joined BOk in 1984 as Vice President in
the financial  institutions  department and was named to his current position in
1997.  Before  joining BOk, he was a  commercial  lender with  Republic  Bank in
Houston for seven years.

     ROBERT G. GREER, age 69, is Vice Chairman of BOT. Mr. Greer joined BOT as a
result of the acquisition of Bank of Tanglewood,  N.A. Prior to the merger,  Mr.
Greer was Chairman of the Board,  Bank of  Tanglewood,  N.A., a position he held
beginning in 1996.  Prior to 1996,  Mr. Greer served as Chairman of the Board of
Bank of  Tanglewood,  N.A. and Vice Chairman of the Board of Northern Trust Bank
of Texas.

     V.  BURNS  HARGIS,  age 57, is Vice  Chairman,  BOK  Financial  and BOk and
Director of BOSC, Inc. Mr. Hargis joined BOk in November, 1997. Previously,  Mr.
Hargis  was an  attorney  with the law firm of  McAfee  & Taft  (Oklahoma  City,
Oklahoma).

     EUGENE A. HARRIS,  age 60, is a director and  Executive  Vice  President of
BOk, Chief Credit Officer and Manager of the Credit Administration Division. Mr.
Harris has been with BOk for 22 years.

     H. JAMES  HOLLOMAN,  age 51, is Executive Vice President of BOk and Manager
of the Trust  Division.  Before  joining Bank of Oklahoma,  he spent 12 years at
First Union National Bank in Charlotte,  NC. Mr.  Holliman has been with Bank of
Oklahoma since 1985.

     JAMES L.  HUNTZINGER,  age 52,  is Chief  Investment  Officer  of BOK.  Mr.
Huntzinger  was  previously   Financial  Manager,   Capital  Markets  and  Chief
Investment Officer of the Trust Division. He has been with BOk since 1982.

     GEORGE B.  KAISER,  age 60, is Chairman of the Board of BOK  Financial  and
BOk; President and principal owner of Kaiser-Francis Oil Company, an independent
oil and gas exploration and production company, and Fountains Continuum of Care,
Inc., which holds interest in senior housing communities.

     DAVID L.  LAUGHLIN,  age 50, is Senior Vice  President and President of the
Mortgage  Banking  Division.  He joined BOk in 1986 as the  Secondary  Marketing
Manager,  in charge of retail  production  and secondary  marketing,  and became
President of Mortgage Banking in 1993. He has served two terms on the Fannie Mae
Advisory  Board  and  is a past  President  of the  Oklahoma  Mortgage  Bankers'
Association and the Tulsa Mortgage  Bankers  Association.  Mr. Laughlin has been
with BOk for 17 years.

     STANLEY A. LYBARGER,  age 53, is President and Chief  Executive  Officer of
BOK Financial and BOk. Mr. Lybarger has been with BOk for 29 years.  Previously,
he was  President  of Bank of  Oklahoma's  Oklahoma  City  Regional  Office  and
Executive Vice President of Bank of Oklahoma with  responsibility  for corporate
banking.

     JOHN C. MORROW,  age 47, is Senior Vice President and serves as Director of
Financial  Accounting  and  Reporting.  He joined BOk  Financial in 1993. He was
previously with Ernst & Young LLP for 10 years.

     STEVEN E. NELL,  age 41, is Executive  Vice  President and Chief  Financial
Officer for BOK  Financial  and BOk.  He joined BOK  Financial  in 1992.  He was
previously with Ernst & Young LLP for 8 years.

     W. JEFFREY  PICKRYL,  age 51, is Executive Vice President  responsible  for
Commercial  Banking  in  Tulsa,  as well as  statewide  energy  and real  estate
lending.  Before  joining BOk in 1997, he was president and Chief Credit Officer
for Liberty Bancorp, Inc. where he worked for 14 years. He had previously worked
at Arizona Bank in Phoenix.

     PAUL A.  SOWARDS,  age 51,  is  President  of Bank of  Albuquerque.  Before
joining Bank of Albuquerque in March, 2000, Mr. Sowards was President of Bank of
America in New Mexico.  Prior to his election as  President  in New Mexico,  Mr.
Sowards was Executive  Vice President and  Commercial  Banking  Market  Manager,
responsible for commercial lending, treasury management and capital markets.

     THOMAS S. SWILEY,  age 53, is President of Bank of Texas.  Prior to joining
Bank of Texas in  March,  2001,  Mr.  Swiley  was  Managing  Director  of Credit
Products, with responsibility for the Southwest region, for Bank of America.

     GREGORY K. SYMONS,  age 50, is Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Bank
of Albuquerque  and is  responsible  for  commercial  banking in New Mexico.  He
previously  served as BOk's Senior Vice President.  Mr. Symons has been with BOK
Financial for 26 years.

     VALERIE C. TOALSON, age 37, is Corporate Controller.  She has been with BOK
Financial for 10 years. She was previously with Price  Waterhouse  Coopers for 6
years.

     All  executive  officers  serve at the pleasure of the Board of  Directors.
Messrs. Hargis and Lybarger have employment agreements which are discussed below
on page 21.




                             EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

     The  following  table  sets  forth  summary   information   concerning  the
compensation  of those  persons who were,  at December 31,  2002,  (i) the Chief
Executive  Officer  and (ii) the four other most  highly  compensated  executive
offices  of  the  Company.   These  five  offices  are  hereafter   referred  to
collectively as the "Named Executive Officers".


Summary Compensation Table (1)

                                                       Annual Compensation                           Long Term Awards (2)
          Name and                                                       Other Annual            Options/         All Other
     Principal Position        Year      Salary ($)    Bonus ($)       Compensation ($)          SARs (#)       Compensation (3)
     ------------------        ----      ----------    ---------       ----------------          --------       -------------
                                                                                                    
Stanley A. Lybarger           2002        $625,000     $175,000            $1,311,889               16,086            $22,000
President & Chief Executive   2001         475,000      150,000               870,648               58,040             18,700
Officer, BOK  Financial and   2000         425,000      125,000               368,756               50,000             18,700
BOk

C. Fred Ball, Jr.             2002         270,000      145,000               190,451               39,028             22,000
President & Chief Executive   2001         255,000      130,000                     0               34,824             18,700
Officer, Bank of Texas, N.A.  2000         240,000       93,500                     0               30,000             16,150

Paul M. Elvir                 2002         247,000      135,000                68,448               18,171             23,000
Executive Vice President,     2001         240,000      120,000                25,422               14,412             19,550
Manager, BOk Operations and   2000         233,000       75,000                     0               13,000             17,000
Technology

V. Burns Hargis               2002         273,500       65,000                84,271               19,026             19,800
Vice Chairman, BOK            2001         265,225       65,000                39,943               17,123             15,470
Financial and BOk             2000         253,380       50,000                     0               15,000             15,470

W. Jeffrey Pickryl            2002         218,000      130,000               113,257               27,779             20,000
Executive Vice President,     2001         210,000      125,000               161,139               23,216             17,000
Commercial Banking            2000         200,000      278,027                     0               22,000             14,450


1    No Restricted Stock Awards or Long Term Incentive Plan payouts were made in 2000,  2001 or 2002 and therefore no columns are
     included for such items in the Summary  Compensation  Table. The Summary  Compensation  Table has been adjusted to reflect a
     two-for-one  Common Stock split in the form of a 100% stock dividend paid on February 22, 1999.

2    After giving effect to November 18, 1993,  November 17, 1994,  November 27, 1995,  November 27, 1996, November 26, 1997,
     November 25, 1998, October 18, 1999, May 1, 2001 and May 13, 2002 3% BOKF Common Stock  Dividends  Payable in Kind in BOKF
     Common Stock.

3    Amounts  shown in this  column  are  derived  from the  following:  (i) Mr. Lybarger,  $10,200, 2000; $10,200, 2001; $12,000,
     2002 - Company payment to the defined benefit plan ("DBP"); $8,500, 2000; $8,500, 2001; $10,000, 2002 - Company matching
     contributions  to 401(K) Thrift Plan ("DCP");  (ii) Mr. Ball, $12,750,  2000; $13,600,  2001;  $16,000,  2002 - DBP; $3,400,
     2000; $5,100, 2001; $6,000, 2002 - DCP; (iii) Mr. Elvir, $13,600,  2000, $14,450, 2001; $17,000,  2002 - DBP; $3,400, 2000;
     $5,100, 2001; $6,000, 2002 - DCP; (iv) Mr. Hargis, $12,750, 2000; $12,750, 2001; $15,000, 2002 - DBP; $2,720, 2000; $2,720,
     2001; $4,800, 2002 - DCP; and (v) Mr. Pickryl, $11,050, 2000; $11,900,  2001; $14,000,  2002 - DBP; $3,400,  2000; $5,100,
     2001; $6,000, 2002 - DCP.



     The following table sets forth certain information concerning stock options
granted to the Named Executive Officers during the 2002 fiscal year.

                                         OPTIONS/SAR GRANTS IN LAST FISCAL YEAR

                                                         Exercise or       % of Total Options/SARs                    Total Grant
                          Grant        Options/SARs      Base Price         Granted to Employees        Expiration   Date Present
Name                        No.       Granted (#)(1)     ($/Sh)(2)            in Fiscal Year              Date      Value $(3)
----                      -----       --------------     -----------       -----------------------      ----------  -------------
                                                                                                       
Stanley A. Lybarger           1             8,281            $33.49                  4.19  %               (2)           $34,697
                              2             7,805             32.89                  4.16                  (2)            32,469
                              3                 0                --                    --                   --                --

C. Fred Ball, Jr.             1             4,969             33.49                  6.01                  (2)            20,820
                              2             4,059             32.89                  5.00                  (2)            16,885
                              3            30,000             32.75                  5.27                  (2)           251,100

Paul M. Elvir                 1             2,485             33.49                  3.01                  (2)            10,412
                              2             2,186             32.89                  2.69                  (2)             9,094
                              3            13,500             32.75                  2.37                  (2)           112,995

V. Burns Hargis               1             3,216             33.49                  3.89                  (2)            13,475
                              2             2,810             32.89                  3.46                  (2)            11,690
                              3            13,000             32.75                  2.28                  (2)           108,810

W. Jeffrey Pickryl            1             3,313             33.49                  4.01                  (2)            13,881
                              2             2,966             32.89                  3.65                  (2)            12,339
                              3            21,500             32.75                  3.78                  (2)           179,955


1    Options  related  to  compensation  for  services  rendered  in 2002 were awarded on three  occasions.  The dates of the Awards
     were November 1, 2002 ("Grant #1"),  December 2, 2002 ("Grant  #2"),  and January 3, 2003 ("Grant #3"). Grants # 1 and #2 were
     awarded pursuant to the BOKF 2001 Stock Option Plan and Grant #3 was awarded pursuant to the BOKF 2000 Stock Option Plan.

2    o All Grant #1 options vest and become exercisable on November 1, 2004 and expire 45 days after vesting.
     o All Grant #2 options vest and become exercisable on December 2, 2004 and expire 45 days after vesting.
     o One-seventh of the Grant #3 options vest and become  exercisable  on January 3 of each year,  commencing on January 3, 2004.
       Grant #3 vested options expire three years after vesting.

3    Present value at date of grant is based on the Black-Scholes Option Pricing Model adopted for use in valuing exercise stock
     options based on the following assumptions:
             o Grant #1: 19.0 volatility  factor,  1.53% risk free rate of return,  $33.49  underlying  price, no dividends;
             o Grant #2: 19.0 volatility  factor,  1.65% risk free rate of return,  $32.89  underlying  price, no dividends;
             o Grant #3: 19.0  volatility  factor,  weighted  average  3.34% risk free rate of return,  $32.75 underlying price, no
               dividends.
     The actual value, if any, an executive may realize will depend on the excess of the stock price over the exercise price on the
     date the option is exercised, so there is no assurance the value realized by the named executive will be at or near the value
     estimated by the Black-Scholes Model.





     The following table sets forth certain information  concerning the exercise
of stock options by the Named Executive Officers during fiscal year 2002 and the
2002 fiscal year-end value of unexercised options.

                                          AGGREGATED OPTION/SAR EXERCISES IN
                                   LAST FISCAL YEAR AND FY-END OPTION/SAR VALUES

                            Shares           Value             Number of Unexercised           Value of Unexercised In the Money
                          Acquired on      Realized                 Options/SARs                         Options/SARs
         Name             Exercise (#)        ($)                  at FY-End (#)                       at FY-End ($)(1)
-----------------------   -------------   ------------    ---------------------------------  -------------------------------------
                                                             Exercisable     Unexercisable         Exercisable       Unexercisable
                                                             -----------     -------------         -----------       -------------
                                                                                                     
Stanley A. Lybarger           56,840        $1,311,889         169,704          185,213             $2,954,566         $1,782,227

C. Fred Ball, Jr.             13,994           190,451          46,987          130,485                585,969            893,783

Paul M. Elvir                  4,670            68,448          24,262           58,688                312,210            405,320

V. Burns Hargis                6,025            84,271          31,503           69,926                407,359            517,661

W. Jeffrey Pickryl             8,898           113,257          24,074           91,854                293,653            637,084


1    Values are calculated by subtracting the exercise or base price from the fair market value of the stock as of the exercise
     date or fiscal year-end, as appropriate.



     A perpetual employment agreement is in effect between BOk and Mr. Lybarger.
Generally, the agreement provides that Mr. Lybarger will continue to be employed
in his  present  position  and at his  current  rate  of  compensation.  BOk may
terminate the employment agreement and be liable for termination benefits not to
exceed  regular  compensation  and  benefit  coverage  for twelve  months  (with
termination benefits to be reduced by the amount of compensation received by Mr.
Lybarger  from other sources  during the seventh  through  twelfth  months after
termination).  In the event of a change of  control  of BOk,  as  defined in the
employment  agreement,  then Mr.  Lybarger  has the option,  for a period of six
months after the change of control,  to resign and receive the same  termination
benefits as described in the preceding  sentence in the event of  termination by
BOk.

     An employment  agreement is in effect between BOK Financial and Mr. Hargis.
Generally,  the  agreement  provides  that Mr.  Hargis  will be  employed by BOK
Financial in the position of Vice Chairman for five years from December 1, 2003.
BOK Financial  may  terminate the agreement  without cause subject to payment of
the agreed annual  compensation and benefits for the remaining contract term. If
such termination  results within one year of a change of control,  as defined in
the  agreement,  Mr. Hargis shall receive his current  monthly  salary times the
remaining months in the term of his contract divided by two. If such termination
is not within one year of a change of control,  Mr. Hargis shall receive  salary
and benefits for three months from the date of termination.



                        REPORT ON EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

     In  December  2002,  the  Board of  Directors  established  an  Independent
Compensation Committee consisting of five independent directors, to administer a
performance based compensation plan for senior executives in accordance with the
provisions of Section 162(m) of the Internal  Revenue Code. The current  members
of the committee are Messrs.  Cappy,  Kyle,  Rooney,  Robinson and Corbett.  The
Independent  Compensation Committee,  with the assistance of a leading executive
compensation  consulting  firm, has developed a performance  based  compensation
plan  which the  shareholders  are being  asked to  approve  at the 2003  Annual
Shareholders Meeting.

     In  addition  to the  performance-based  compensation  which is intended to
comply with the requirements of Section 162(m), the company employs a wide range
of other  incentive  compensation  for its employees  including a combination of
annual salary,  bonuses,  pension plans and stock options.  Such compensation is
designed  to  attract  and  retain  quality  management  and  reward  long  term
performance of the company.  Compensation of the executive officers,  other than
Mr. Lybarger, has in practice been determined by Mr. Lybarger, the President and
Chief  Executive  Officer,  and Mr. Kaiser,  the Chairman of the Board.  Messrs.
Kaiser and  Lybarger  are  directors  of the  Company  and are herein  sometimes
referred to collectively as the "Informal Compensation Committee".

     With  respect to the 2002 fiscal  year,  the  compensation  paid  executive
officers was based on the evaluation by the Informal  Compensation  Committee of
the  performance of the Company and the  performance  of the individual  officer
(except that the evaluation of and  compensation  of Mr. Lybarger was determined
solely by Mr. Kaiser).  The cash and noncash  compensation awarded the executive
officers was based on the  performance  of the Company in meeting the  corporate
goals  established  for  business  development,  expansion  of market  coverage,
financial  achievement  and other areas.  The  responsibility  of each executive
officer for the  various  established  corporate  goals and the  performance  in
meeting those goals were considered in establishing executive compensation.

     The foregoing  report on executive  compensation is made by Messrs.  Kaiser
and Lybarger. The newly formed Independent Compensation Committee has nothing to
report with respect to the 2002 fiscal year.


           COMPENSATION COMMITTEE INTERLOCKS AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION

     None of the members of the Independent  Compensation  Committee were at any
time officers or employees of the Company or any of its  subsidiaries or had any
relationship  with the Company  requiring  disclosure  under the  Securities and
Exchange Commission  regulations.  Messrs. Kaiser and Lybarger,  who make up the
Informal Compensation  Committee which administers all compensation not intended
to comply with Section 162(m), determine the majority of the compensation of the
executive  officers.  See  "Report  of  Executive   Compensation"  and  "Certain
Transactions".



                      SHAREHOLDER RETURN PERFORMANCE GRAPH

     The BOKF Common  Stock  (with  non-detachable  rights to  purchase  fifteen
additional BOKF Common shares at $0.054625 per share) was registered pursuant to
the  Securities  Exchange  Act of 1934 and  listed  for  trading  on  NASDAQ  on
September  5, 1991.  The BOKF  shares  traded with the rights  attached  through
October 28, 1991. The BOKF shares traded ex-rights from and after the opening or
trading on October  29,  1991.  Set forth  below is a line graph  comparing  the
change in  cumulative  shareholder  return on the Common Stock of BOK  Financial
against the cumulative total shareholders return of the NASDAQ Index, the NASDAQ
Bank Index,  and the KBW 50 Bank Index for the period  commencing  December  31,
1997 and ending December 31, 2002.*

Comparison of Cumulative Total Return Graph shown here. Data points reflected in
indexes below.


   ========================================================================================================================
                                     12/31/1997    12/31/1998    12/31/1999     12/31/2000     12/31/2001    12/31/2002
   ========================================================================================================================
                                                                                           
   BOKF                              $   100.00    $   125.17    $   110.65     $   116.38     $   177.91    $   188.53
   ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   NASDQ Bank Stocks                 $   100.00    $    99.36    $    95.51     $   108.94     $   117.96    $   120.60
   ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   KBW 50 Bank                       $   100.00    $   108.28    $   104.52     $   125.48     $   120.31    $   111.87
   ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   NASDQ (CSP U.S. Company)          $   100.00    $   140.99    $   261.48     $   157.42     $   124.89    $    86.34
   ========================================================================================================================


*    Graph assumes value of an investment in the Company's Common Stock for each
     index was $100 on December  31,  1996.  The KBW 50 Bank index is the Keefe,
     Bruyette & Woods, Inc. index,  which is available only for calendar quarter
     end periods.  No dividends  were paid on BOK Financial  Common Stock except
     (i) on November 17, 1993,  the Company paid a 3% dividend on BOK  Financial
     Common  Stock  outstanding  as of November  9, 1993  payable in kind by the
     issuance of BOK  Financial  Stock,  (ii) on November 17, 1994,  the Company
     paid a 3% dividend on BOK Financial Common Stock outstanding as of November
     8, 1994  payable in kind by the  issuance of BOK  Financial  Common  Stock,
     (iii) on November 27, 1995, the Company paid a 3% dividend on BOK Financial
     Common  Stock  outstanding  as of November  17, 1995 payable in kind by the
     issuance of BOK  Financial  Common  Stock,  (iv) on November 27, 1996,  the
     Company paid a 3% dividend on BOK Financial Common Stock  outstanding as of
     November 18, 1996 payable in kind by the issuance of BOK  Financial  Common
     Stock;  (v) on November  26,  1997,  the Company  paid a 3% dividend on BOK
     Financial Common Stock outstanding as of November 17, 1997, payable in kind
     by the issuance of BOK Financial  Common Stock,  (vi) on November 25, 1998,
     the Company paid a 3% dividend on BOK Financial Common Stock outstanding as
     of November  13,  1998,  (vii) on October 18,  1999,  the Company paid a 3%
     dividend on BOK Financial  Common Stock  outstanding as of October 5, 1999,
     (viii) and on May 18, 2001, the Company paid a 3% dividend on BOK Financial
     Common Stock outstanding as of May 7, 2001 and on May 29, 2002, the Company
     paid a 3% dividend on BOK Financial Common Stock  outstanding as of May 13,
     2002.  The graph has been  adjusted to reflect a  two-for-one  Common Stock
     split in the form of a 100% stock dividend paid on February 22, 1999.



                                INSIDER REPORTING

     Based  upon a review  of the  filings  with  the  Securities  and  Exchange
Commission and written  representations that no other reports were required,  we
believe that all of our directors and executive  officers complied during fiscal
year 2002 with the reporting  requirements  of Section  16(a) of the  Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, with the exception of Mark Funke,  who filed a late report
in August 2002 relating to 12,692 shares sold in March 2002,  100 shares sold in
April 2002,  531 shares  acquired  pursuant  to 3%  dividend in May 2002,  2,000
shares sold in June 2002,  and who filed a late report in November  2002 for 100
shares sold in November 2002; Stanley Lybarger,  who filed a late report in July
2002 relating to 1,142 shares sold in May 2002; L. Francis  Rooney,  who filed a
late  report in July 2002  relating  to 42,000  shares  which were gifted by the
Rooney Brothers Company in May 2002;  Gregory K. Symons, who filed a late report
in July 2002 relating to 530 shares gifted by Mr. Symons in May 2002;  and James
Huntzinger,  who filed a late report in September  2002 relating to 2,330 shares
sold in September 2002.

                              CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS

     Certain  principal  shareholders,   directors  of  the  Company  and  their
associates were customers of and had loan transactions with BOK Financial or its
subsidiaries  during 2002. None of them currently  outstanding are classified as
nonaccrual,  past due,  restructured or potential  problem loans. All such loans
(i)  were  made  in  the  ordinary  course  of  business,   (ii)  were  made  on
substantially the same terms, including interest rates and collateral,  as those
prevailing at the time for comparable transactions with other persons, and (iii)
did not  involved  more than  normal  risk of  collectibility  or present  other
unfavorable features at the time the loans were made.

     BOK  Financial  borrowed  $30 million  during  2001 from  George  Kaiser by
issuing a  subordinated  debenture.  The proceeds of this borrowing were used to
support asset growth,  including the acquisition of CNBT  Bancshares,  Inc. This
debenture  was to mature in March 2008.  Interest  was based on LIBOR plus 1.75%
payable  quarterly.  BOK Financial  paid the debenture in full during 2002.  BOk
leases office space in office  buildings owned by Mr. Kaiser and affiliates.  In
2002, an affiliate of BOK Financial sold Oklahoma State Income Tax Credits to a)
GBK  Corporation,  an  affiliate of Mr.  Kaiser,  receiving  $2,250,000,  b) Mr.
Kaiser,  receiving  $7,646,850,  and c) Stanley  Lybarger,  receiving $99,000 in
exchange for such credits.

     All  transactions  described  above  between BOKF or a  subsidiary  and Mr.
Kaiser or a related  entity were approved in advance by a majority of the entire
board of BOk or BOKF, as  appropriate,  (Mr.  Kaiser not voting) after review by
the Chief Financial Officer.


                         INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS

     Ernst & Young LLP, independent public accountants,  has been reappointed by
the Board of Directors of the Company as independent auditors for the Company to
examine and report on its financial  statements for 2003. Ernst & Young LLP have
been  auditors of the accounts of the Company since its inception on October 24,
1990.  Representatives  of Ernst & Young LLP are  expected  to be present at the
annual  meeting,  with the  opportunity to make a statement if they desire to do
so, and will be available to respond to appropriate questions.



                            PROPOSALS OF SHAREHOLDERS

     The Board of Directors will consider proposals of shareholders  intended to
be presented for action at the Annual Meeting of Shareholders.  According to the
rules  of the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission,  such  proposals  shall be
included  in the  Company's  Proxy  Statement  if they are  received in a timely
manner and if certain other requirements are met. For a shareholder  proposal to
be  included  in the  Company's  Proxy  Statement  relating  to the 2004  Annual
Shareholders'  Meeting,  a  written  proposal  complying  with the  requirements
established by the Securities  and Exchange  Commission  must be received at the
Company's principal executive offices, located at Bank of Oklahoma Tower, Tulsa,
Oklahoma 74172, no later than December 1, 2003.

                                  OTHER MATTERS

     Management  does not know of any matters to be presented  for action at the
meeting other than those listed in the Notice of Meeting and referred to herein.
If any other matters  properly come before the meeting,  it is intended that the
Proxy solicited hereby will be voted in accordance with the  recommendations  of
the Board of Directors.


         COPIES OF THE ANNUAL REPORT ON FORM 10-K AND OTHER DISCLOSURE
STATEMENTS FOR BOK FINANCIAL CORPORATION MAY BE OBTAINED WITHOUT CHARGE TO THE
SHAREHOLDERS BY WRITING TO THE CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER, BOK FINANCIAL
CORPORATION, P. O. BOX 2300, TULSA, OKLAHOMA 74192, OR VIA E-MAIL THROUGH THE
BOKF WEBSITE LOCATED AT HTTP://WWW.BOKF.COM.

         THE COMPANY MAKES AVAILABLE ITS PERIODIC AND CURRENT REPORTS, FREE OF
CHARGE, ON ITS WEB SITE AS SOON AS REASONABLY PRACTICABLE AFTER SUCH MATERIAL IS
ELECTRONICALLY FILED WITH, OR FURNISHED TO, THE SEC.