Sell Your Mineral Rights in Greene County, AL

If you own mineral rights in Greene County, Alabama, you're sitting on acreage tied to the Black Warrior Basin's coalbed methane history — a quieter corner of the gas world, but not without real value. Activity here has slowed from its peak, but there are still buyers, and knowing what you have before you decide anything is the smartest first move you can make.

ASSET OVERVIEW

Est. per Acre

$50–$400

per net royalty acre

Active Wells

12+

Drilling Activity

Core Basin

Black Warrior Basin

Primary Formation

Primary Resource

Natural Gas

Commodity Type

What's Actually Happening With Mineral Rights in Greene County

Greene County sits in west-central Alabama — county seat is Eutaw — and its mineral rights story is tied almost entirely to the Black Warrior Basin's coalbed methane play rather than conventional oil and gas drilling. That play had its most active years in the 1990s and 2000s, and the pace of new drilling has slowed considerably since then. That doesn't mean your rights are worthless — it means the market here is more speculative and buyer-driven, with values shaped largely by proximity to existing production units and pipeline infrastructure. Before you respond to any offer or sign anything, it's worth understanding what you actually own and whether a buyer is seeing something in your acreage that they haven't told you about.

Greene County Mineral Rights by the Numbers

$50 – $400

estimate, varies by proximity to production

Estimated Value Range Per Acre

~12

CBM and conventional combined

Active and Permitted Wells (approx.)

500 – 2,000

feet (CBM coal seams)

Primary Formation Depth

Natural Gas

coalbed methane dominant

Primary Commodity

Black Warrior Basin

western Alabama extent

Primary Basin

Who's Operating in Greene County

Black Warrior Methane

private

Energen Corporation

acquired by Diamondback

ALAGASCO (Spire Energy)

SR

Sonat Exploration

private/historical

What's in the Ground

Pottsville Formation (CBM Coal Seams)

Black Warrior Basin

The primary target in Greene County. These Pennsylvanian-age coal seams sit at relatively shallow depths — often 500 to 2,000 feet — and have produced coalbed methane through dewatering. Production rates per well are modest compared to deep shale plays, which is a big part of why per-acre values here are lower than in more active basins.

Floyd Shale

Black Warrior Basin

A Mississippian-age shale with some gas potential, though it has seen limited modern horizontal development in Greene County specifically. It represents a longer-term, more speculative upside rather than near-term production.

Black Warrior Basin Conventional Sands

Black Warrior Basin

Older conventional gas wells targeting various sandstone intervals exist in the county but are largely in late-life production stages. Don't expect new leasing activity targeting these formations to be a major driver of value near term.

What to Know About Greene County

Mineral Records at the Greene County Courthouse in Eutaw

Deed and mineral records for Greene County are maintained at the Probate Court in Eutaw. Severed mineral interests in this county have frequently passed through estate proceedings, which means chains of title can be fragmented. If you inherited your rights, it's worth confirming the deed was properly recorded — an unclear title can delay or reduce any sale.

CBM Unitization and Pooling

Coalbed methane development in Alabama often involved large pooled or unitized areas. If your acreage falls within an established CBM unit, your royalty interest may already be producing — or your rights may be subject to existing lease terms. Check your title documents carefully before assuming your rights are unleased.

Alabama State Royalty Minimum

Alabama law sets a minimum royalty rate of 1/8 (12.5%) for oil and gas leases. If you're being offered a lease rather than an outright sale, make sure any royalty offered meets or exceeds that floor — and consider negotiating for higher if there's active production nearby.

Heirs' Property Is Common Here

Greene County has a higher-than-average rate of heirs' property — mineral rights that passed informally through families without formal probate. If you're not sure your name is actually on the deed, that needs to be resolved before you can legally sell or lease. This is fixable, but it takes time.

Questions We Hear From Greene County Owners

I got an offer out of nowhere from a company I've never heard of. Should I be suspicious?
Not necessarily suspicious, but definitely careful. Mineral buyers in quieter markets like Greene County often mail offers without much negotiation built in — they're hoping you'll take the first number. The fact that someone reached out means they see potential in your acreage. That's actually useful information. Get a second opinion on the value before you respond or sign anything.
Is there any chance of new drilling activity in Greene County, or is this basin played out?
Honest answer: the CBM boom in the Black Warrior Basin has passed its peak, and Greene County specifically has seen very limited new well activity in recent years. That said, the Floyd Shale and other deeper targets haven't been aggressively tested with modern horizontal drilling here. It's not a hot play right now, but calling it entirely played out overstates things. Values are lower because of the uncertainty, not because the gas is gone.
My family has owned these mineral rights for decades and no one has ever received a royalty check. Does that mean they're worthless?
Not necessarily. It could mean the rights were never leased, that any lease has expired, or that production exists but the title wasn't properly probated so payments were suspended. It could also mean the acreage simply hasn't been developed. The first step is confirming you actually hold valid, recorded title — then you can figure out whether there's active production or lease interest tied to your parcel.

Not Sure What Your Greene County Mineral Rights Are Worth?

That's the most common starting point, and it's a good one. We'll take a look at your acreage, tell you what we're seeing in the market, and give you a straight answer — no pressure, no obligation. Start with a free conversation.

Get My Free Valuation
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