Sell Your Mineral Rights in Greene County, AL

If you own mineral rights in Greene County, Alabama, you're holding an interest in the Appalachian Basin — one of the oldest gas-producing regions in the country. Activity here is more speculative than headline basins like the Marcellus or Permian, but there are buyers out there, and your rights may be worth more than you'd expect. Let's give you an honest picture of what you have.

ASSET OVERVIEW

Est. per Acre

$50–$400

per net royalty acre

Core Basin

Appalachian Basin

Primary Formation

Primary Resource

Natural Gas

Commodity Type

What Mineral Rights Ownership Looks Like in Greene County Right Now

Greene County sits in the southwestern reach of the Appalachian Basin, which has produced natural gas for well over a century. That said, this part of Alabama is not a high-density drilling zone — activity here is limited compared to the northern reaches of the basin in states like Pennsylvania or West Virginia. If you've received an offer or inherited rights, it's worth understanding that buyers do exist for Appalachian Basin acreage in Alabama, often speculative or aggregation-focused investors who are betting on future development rather than immediate production. Before you sign anything or walk away, get a clear-eyed valuation — you're not in the hottest market, but you're not holding nothing either.

Greene County Mineral Rights at a Glance

Appalachian Basin

Primary Basin

Natural Gas

Primary Commodity

$50

estimate

Estimated Value Per Acre (Low)

$400

estimate

Estimated Value Per Acre (High)

7,706

residents (U.S. Census)

County Population

Who's Operating in Greene County

Active operators in this part of Alabama are generally smaller independents and regional exploration companies. We do not list specific names here without verified data to back them up — but we can research who holds leases on your specific acreage.

What's in the Ground

Conasauga Shale

Appalachian Basin

A deep Cambrian-age formation that runs through Alabama and has been a target for natural gas exploration in parts of the state. Technically challenging and expensive to develop, which limits near-term drilling activity in lower-density counties like Greene.

Floyd Shale

Appalachian Basin

A Mississippian-age shale present in central and western Alabama. It has seen interest as a potential unconventional gas play, though commercial development in Greene County specifically has been limited.

Chattanooga Shale

Appalachian Basin

A Devonian black shale that extends across much of the southeastern United States. It's a known gas source rock in the Appalachian Basin, though producing wells in this part of Alabama are not widespread.

Questions We Hear From Greene County Owners

I got an offer out of the blue. Should I take it?
Unsolicited offers are common for mineral rights owners — especially in areas where buyers are quietly aggregating acreage ahead of potential development. That doesn't mean the offer is fair. In a county like Greene, where activity is limited, buyers may be lowballing precisely because they expect you don't have a reference point. Get a second opinion before you respond.
My rights have been sitting idle for years. Are they still worth anything?
Yes, likely. Mineral rights don't expire just because no one is drilling. The formations beneath Greene County still hold potential gas resources, and buyers speculate on future development even when there's no active well on your land today. The value depends on your acreage, the specific formations below, and what lease terms may already be in place.
Greene County is a small, rural county — does that hurt my mineral rights value?
It does factor in. Greene County has a population of about 7,700 and a relatively low level of industrial development, which means there's less local infrastructure and fewer operators active nearby compared to more heavily drilled counties. That said, mineral value is about what's underground, not what's on the surface. Your acreage is evaluated on formation potential and basin positioning, not the size of the nearest town — which is Eutaw, the county seat.

What to Know About Greene County, Alabama

Alabama State Oil and Gas Board

Mineral rights in Greene County are regulated by the Alabama State Oil and Gas Board (AOGB), which oversees drilling permits, production reporting, and well spacing. If you want to know whether any wells have been permitted or drilled on your acreage, the AOGB's public records are a good starting point.

Severed Mineral Rights Are Common

In Alabama, mineral rights are frequently severed from surface rights — meaning the person who owns the land may not own what's underneath. If you inherited mineral rights in Greene County, it's possible your ownership is documented separately from any surface deed. A title review will confirm what you actually hold.

Lease Terms Matter Here

Because Greene County is not a high-activity drilling market, the lease terms you negotiate — royalty rate, lease duration, and Pugh clauses — matter a great deal. There's less competitive pressure on operators here, so it's important to have experienced representation before signing any lease.

How a Sale Works

Outright Sale

You sell your mineral rights permanently for a lump-sum payment. This makes sense if you want liquidity now and don't want to wait on uncertain future development. In a speculative market like Greene County, some owners prefer the certainty of cash today over the possibility of royalties that may never arrive.

Lease (Keep the Rights, Earn Royalties)

You sign a lease with an operator, who pays you a bonus upfront and a royalty percentage if a well is drilled and produces. You retain ownership of the mineral rights. This is the right move if you believe development is coming and want to participate in the upside.

Partial Sale

You sell a portion of your mineral interest — say, a fraction of your royalty or a subset of your acreage — while keeping the rest. This lets you take some money off the table while staying exposed to future production. It's a flexible option that not every buyer offers, but worth asking about.

Find Out What Your Greene County Mineral Rights Are Actually Worth

You don't have to figure this out alone. We'll take a look at your acreage, the formations below it, and any existing lease or offer you've received — and give you a straight answer on what it's worth and what your options are. No pressure, no obligation.

Get My Free Valuation

Data Sources

Production and operator figures for Greene County are drawn from U.S. Census Bureau (ACS 5-Year), and Wikipedia. Per-acre values are estimates and not an offer.

EXPLORE THE BASIN

Other Appalachian Basin Counties

Greene County is part of the Appalachian Basin. See the full basin overview, operators, and counties we serve.

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