FOR GEORGIA RESIDENTS
We help Georgia residents sell inherited Louisiana mineral rights in the Haynesville Shale, Tuscaloosa Marine Shale, and other areas. Complete the sale without leaving Georgia.
Get Your Free ValuationLouisiana has a long history of oil and gas production, from the early salt dome fields to today's modern horizontal drilling in the Haynesville Shale. If you're a Georgia resident who inherited Louisiana mineral rights, you're managing assets from a neighboring Southern state, though still several hundred miles away.
Many Georgia residents discover they own Louisiana minerals after inheriting from family members who lived in Louisiana or worked in the oil patch. The Deep South connection means many Louisiana families relocated to Georgia for new opportunities while retaining mineral rights back home. Managing these assets can still be challenging:
Understanding Louisiana's unique mineral laws (based on civil law, not common law)
Dealing with the prescription period (minerals can lapse back to surface owner)
Tracking production across different parishes
Filing Louisiana income tax returns for royalty income
We buy minerals throughout Louisiana. The state's oil and gas production spans several distinct areas:
One of America's largest natural gas plays in Northwest Louisiana. Parishes: Caddo, Bossier, DeSoto, Red River, Sabine. Premium location for gas-focused minerals.
Oil-focused play in Central Louisiana with developing activity. Parishes: LaSalle, Avoyelles, Rapides.
Legacy production from salt dome and offshore-adjacent fields. Parishes: Vermilion, Iberia, St. Mary, Terrebonne, Lafourche, Cameron.
Legacy Cotton Valley, Austin Chalk, and other formations. Various parishes across northern Louisiana.
Louisiana is the only state with mineral laws based on the civil law tradition (from French and Spanish colonial influence) rather than English common law. This creates some unique situations:
Prescription: Unused mineral rights can "prescribe" (lapse) back to the surface owner after 10 years of non-use
Mineral servitudes: Louisiana uses "servitudes" rather than fee ownership in some cases
Understanding these nuances is important when selling. We're familiar with Louisiana mineral law and can navigate these complexities.
Georgia and Louisiana share deep Southern roots, and families have moved between the two states for generations. Many Louisiana families relocated to Atlanta and other Georgia cities for careers in business, healthcare, and other industries, while retaining mineral rights in the Pelican State.
Whether your family has Louisiana roots going back generations or you inherited minerals from a distant relative, selling provides immediate value without the complications of long-distance management and Louisiana's unique legal requirements.
Parish, section/township/range, production
Production data, title, prescription status
No travel to Louisiana required
Wire transfer or certified check
We'll research your Louisiana mineral rights and provide a written offer. No obligation, no cost.
Start Your Free ValuationOr call us at (817) 778-9532
Top 10 U.S. oil producer
Top 10 gas producer
64 parishes
Haynesville resurgence