What your Texas Panhandle minerals are worth comes down to a handful of drivers — not a per-acre rule of thumb. Here's what actually moves the number, and how to get a real one for free.
Get a Free Written OfferStraight answer There is no honest per-acre price for Texas Panhandle minerals — value follows your specific decimal interest, well decline, remaining inventory, operator, lease terms, and prices. The only realistic number is a written offer computed from your check stubs and county records, which Buckhead Energy provides free.
Net mineral acres ÷ unit size × royalty rate. The single biggest input — and the one owners most often misread off a division order.
How much your wells produce now and how fast that fades. Modern wells front-load their royalties, so this month's check overstates next year's.
Remaining locations in your unit. Permits, spacing, and offset activity signal upside a buyer will pay for.
A well-capitalized, active operator develops and keeps wells flowing; a marginal one does not. Who operates your tract matters.
Royalty rate (1/8 vs 1/4), post-production cost language, and Pugh/depth clauses change net income materially.
Realized price is the benchmark minus regional basis and deductions — which varies by basin and gathering system.
The Texas Panhandle is one of North America's longest-producing oil and gas regions, with continuous activity since 1921 across the Hugoton gas field, Granite Wash horizontal play, Cleveland Sand, Tonkawa, Atoka, and Marmaton intervals in Hutchinson, Hemphill, Wheeler, Roberts, Lipscomb, Ochiltree, Hansford, Carson, Gray, and Moore counties. It spans Texas.
Full Texas Panhandle overview & counties → · Live market data & drilling activity →
Value in the Texas Panhandle comes down to your decimal interest, the production and decline profile of the wells on your tract, how much undrilled inventory remains in the unit, the operators active in the area, your lease terms (royalty rate and deductions), and current commodity prices. There is no per-acre shortcut — a written offer computed from your check stubs and the county records is the realistic answer.
That depends on your goals, not a one-size answer. Producing royalties pay most heavily early and decline over time, so selling near peak captures value the decline curve later takes back; owners also sell for certainty over price-exposed income, to simplify scattered interests, or for liquidity. Buckhead Energy provides a free written offer with the reasoning shown so you can compare keeping vs. selling.
Send your division orders, three to twelve months of royalty check stubs, and your lease if you have it. Buckhead Energy models each well's production and decline, verifies your decimal, applies current prices, and returns a written offer — no fees, no commissions, no obligation.
The Texas Panhandle is one of North America's longest-producing oil and gas regions, with continuous activity since 1921 across the Hugoton gas field, Granite Wash horizontal play, Cleveland Sand, Tonkawa, Atoka, and Marmaton intervals in Hutchinson, Hemphill, Wheeler, Roberts, Lipscomb, Ochiltree, Hansford, Carson, Gray, and Moore counties. It spans Texas.
Yes. Buckhead Energy is a direct buyer of mineral and royalty interests across the Texas Panhandle and Texas — buying with our own capital to hold, with title work handled and paid for and closings typically in 30–45 days.
A written offer with the reasoning explained. No fees, no commissions, no obligation.
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