Sell Your Mineral Rights in De Soto Parish, LA

If you own mineral rights in De Soto Parish, you're sitting in the core of one of the most productive natural gas basins in the United States — the Haynesville Shale. This isn't speculative acreage; it's a basin that major operators are actively drilling right now, and buyers are paying real money for rights here. Let's talk about what yours are actually worth.

ASSET OVERVIEW

Est. per Acre

$1,500–$5,000

per net royalty acre

Core Basin

Haynesville Shale

Primary Formation

Primary Resource

Natural Gas

Commodity Type

What's Happening With Mineral Rights in De Soto Parish Right Now

De Soto Parish sits squarely in the heart of the Haynesville Shale play, which has seen sustained and serious operator investment for over a decade — and activity has picked back up meaningfully as natural gas demand has grown alongside LNG export capacity along the Gulf Coast. If you've received an offer from an operator or land company recently, that's not a coincidence; buyers are actively targeting this parish. Before you sign anything or decide to hold, it's worth understanding what you actually have and what the current market looks like. The Haynesville here is a deep, high-pressure, high-rate gas formation — not marginal acreage. Your mineral rights could be genuinely valuable depending on where they're located and whether there's existing or planned well activity nearby.

De Soto Parish Mineral Rights at a Glance

Haynesville Shale

Primary Basin

Natural Gas

Primary Commodity

$1,500

est.

Estimated Value Per Acre (low end)

$5,000+

est.

Estimated Value Per Acre (high end)

10,500–13,500

feet approx.

Haynesville Formation Depth

Who's Operating in De Soto Parish

Comstock Resources

CRK

Aethon Energy

Private

Indigo Natural Resources

Private

What's in the Ground

Haynesville Shale

Haynesville Basin

The primary target in De Soto Parish. The Haynesville is a deep, overpressured shale formation that produces dry natural gas at very high initial rates. It requires significant capital to drill but delivers strong returns when gas prices support it — and operators here have been drilling it consistently. This is what most buyers are paying for when they come after your mineral rights.

Bossier Shale

Haynesville Basin

The Bossier sits just above the Haynesville and is sometimes completed in the same wellbore or targeted separately. It's a secondary gas target that adds optionality to mineral rights in this area, though it sees less activity than the Haynesville proper.

Cotton Valley

Haynesville Basin

A shallower, tighter sand formation that was a primary target in this region before the shale era. Some older vertical wells produced from Cotton Valley. It's generally not the reason buyers are making offers today, but it does add some depth to what's available beneath your land.

What to Know About De Soto Parish

Louisiana Uses the Commissioner of Conservation, Not a County Clerk System

Mineral rights in Louisiana are regulated at the state level through the Office of Conservation. Drilling units and spacing orders are set by the state, which affects how your royalty interest is calculated when a well is drilled nearby. It's worth understanding how your acreage fits into any existing or proposed unit.

Mineral Servitudes and the 10-Year Prescription Rule

Louisiana has a unique legal concept called a mineral servitude. If mineral rights were separated from surface ownership and there has been no production or use for 10 years, those rights can revert to the surface owner by prescription. If you inherited rights that haven't seen activity, it's worth verifying your title is still intact before assuming you own what you think you do.

Mansfield Is the Parish Seat — Records Are There

De Soto Parish records, including conveyances and mineral leases, are maintained in Mansfield, the parish seat. If you're trying to research the chain of title on inherited rights, that's your starting point. Online access to Louisiana parish records varies, and some older documents may require an in-person visit or a landman.

De Soto Parish's Position in the Haynesville Core

De Soto Parish is consistently cited alongside Caddo and Red River parishes as part of the core Haynesville footprint. That matters for valuation — acreage in the core typically commands meaningfully higher prices than fringe acreage in surrounding areas because well performance is more predictable and operators have established infrastructure here.

Questions We Hear From De Soto Parish Owners

I got an offer out of nowhere for my mineral rights. Should I take it?
Maybe — but not before you know what you have. Unsolicited offers in De Soto Parish right now are usually coming from mineral buyers who've done their homework on your acreage already. That doesn't mean the offer is bad, but it does mean they have information you might not have. The first step is simply understanding whether there's active or planned drilling near your tract, and what the going rate per acre is in that area. That takes maybe a day to find out, and it puts you in a much better position to negotiate or decide.
I inherited these mineral rights. How do I know if they're still mine?
This is a real question in Louisiana because of the mineral servitude prescription rules. If the rights have been separated from the surface for more than 10 years without any production or acknowledged use, they may have reverted — or there may be questions about the title. A title search through a Louisiana-licensed attorney or a professional landman is the right call here. It's not expensive relative to what the rights could be worth, and it saves a lot of grief later.
Natural gas prices have been low. Does that mean my rights aren't worth much right now?
It's a fair concern, and gas prices do affect what buyers will pay. That said, De Soto Parish sits in the Haynesville core, where well performance is strong and major operators are still actively drilling — they're building for future demand, especially LNG exports. Buyers pricing Haynesville acreage are looking at long-term fundamentals, not just today's spot price. Values have compressed some from peak periods, but this is not distressed acreage. Realistic estimates right now range from roughly $1,500 to $5,000 per acre depending on location and lease terms, with productive acreage near active units at the higher end.

Find Out What Your De Soto Parish Mineral Rights Are Worth

You don't have to figure this out alone. We work with mineral owners in De Soto Parish regularly and can give you a straightforward, no-pressure read on what your rights are likely worth and what your options are — whether that's selling, leasing, or simply holding. There's no cost for the conversation and no obligation.

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Data Sources

Production and operator figures for De Soto Parish are drawn from U.S. Census Bureau (ACS 5-Year). Per-acre values are estimates and not an offer.

EXPLORE THE BASIN

Other Haynesville Shale Counties

De Soto Parish is part of the Haynesville Shale. See the full basin overview, operators, and counties we serve.

CITIES & COMMUNITIES

Cities & Towns in De Soto Parish

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