Sell Your Mineral Rights in Beckham County, OK

If you own mineral rights in Beckham County, you're sitting on acreage in one of Oklahoma's historically productive gas counties — home to deep Morrow and Granite Wash production that has drawn operators for decades. Values here are more modest than oil-heavy basins, but the right acreage in the right unit still gets real attention from buyers. Let us tell you honestly what yours are worth.

ASSET OVERVIEW

Est. per Acre

$200–$1,200

per net royalty acre

Active Wells

320+

Drilling Activity

Core Basin

Anadarko Basin

Primary Formation

Primary Resource

Natural Gas

Commodity Type

What's Actually Happening in Beckham County Right Now

Beckham County sits in the western Anadarko Basin, and its story is primarily a gas story — deep formations like the Morrow and Granite Wash have been producing here for a long time, and while the county isn't seeing the kind of leasing frenzy you'd find in an active oil play, there is still legitimate buyer interest in well-positioned acreage. The county seat is Sayre, and operators working this area have been selectively maintaining and occasionally re-completing existing wells rather than drilling large volumes of new ones. That means if you recently received an offer or are getting royalty checks, it's worth understanding whether you're in a producing unit or sitting on undeveloped acreage — because the value difference is significant. Don't make a decision without knowing which situation applies to you.

Beckham County by the Numbers

~320

wells

Estimated Active Wells

$500 – $1,200

per acre (estimate)

Estimated Value Range (Producing Acreage)

$200 – $500

per acre (estimate)

Estimated Value Range (Non-Producing Acreage)

9,000 – 13,000

feet

Primary Formation Depth (Morrow)

Natural Gas

Primary Commodity

Who's Operating in Beckham County

Devon Energy

DVN

Citation Oil & Gas

Private

Chaparral Energy

Private

SandRidge Energy

SD

Unit Corporation

Private

What's in the Ground

Morrow

Anadarko Basin

The Morrow is the workhorse formation in Beckham County. It's a tight sandstone play at depths typically ranging from 9,000 to 13,000 feet, and it has been producing natural gas here since the mid-20th century. Some of the most active legacy production in this county comes from Morrow wells, and buyers pay attention to acreage with good Morrow exposure.

Granite Wash

Anadarko Basin

The Granite Wash underlies portions of Beckham County and produces a mix of gas and natural gas liquids. It's a more complex play than the Morrow — production can vary a lot well-to-well — but acreage in established Granite Wash units commands a premium because the liquids component improves economics meaningfully compared to dry gas alone.

Red Fork

Anadarko Basin

A shallower sandstone formation that shows up across the Anadarko Basin. In Beckham County, Red Fork production tends to be lighter and less consistent than the Morrow, but it adds optionality value for buyers looking at multi-zone stacked pay potential.

What to Know About Beckham County

County Records Are Kept in Sayre

Mineral rights records for Beckham County are maintained at the Beckham County Courthouse in Sayre, Oklahoma. If you need to confirm ownership, check for existing leases, or pull the chain of title on inherited minerals, that's where the land records live. Title searches here are typically handled by local landmen familiar with the area's older conveyances.

Older Deeds Often Have Vague Mineral Descriptions

A lot of Beckham County mineral interests changed hands decades ago through estate transfers and rural land sales that weren't always cleanly documented. If you inherited your minerals, there's a real chance the deed language is ambiguous about exactly what fraction you own. Clarifying this before you sell or lease matters — it protects you and speeds up any transaction.

Oklahoma's 300-Acre Forced Pooling Units Are Common Here

Oklahoma allows operators to force-pool unleased mineral owners into drilling units. In the deep Morrow play specifically, spacing units in Beckham County have historically been 320 to 640 acres. If you're unleased and an operator is drilling nearby, you may receive a pooling notice from the Oklahoma Corporation Commission — that's a decision point that deserves careful attention.

Citation Oil & Gas Has Been Notably Active in This County

Unlike some of its Anadarko Basin neighbors where Devon or Chaparral have dominated recent activity, Beckham County has seen Citation Oil & Gas maintain a meaningful operational footprint here, particularly in the Morrow. If you've received a lease offer from Citation or are seeing them listed as operator on your royalty statements, that's consistent with their documented history in this specific county.

Questions We Hear From Beckham County Owners

I'm getting a small royalty check every month. Is that a sign my minerals are worth selling?
It depends on the size and trend of those checks. Producing minerals with a consistent royalty stream are worth more than undeveloped acreage because a buyer is paying for proven cash flow, not just potential. If your checks have been declining over time — which is common as wells age in the Morrow — that affects value too. We'd want to look at your division order and recent production history before giving you a number. The answer isn't always 'sell,' but you should at least know what the market would pay.
Why is the per-acre value lower here than what I've read about Permian Basin counties?
The short answer is that Beckham County is primarily a gas county, and natural gas is worth significantly less per BTU than oil right now. The Permian is an oil play with massive infrastructure and intense operator competition — that drives values up fast. The Anadarko Basin's western counties like Beckham produce real revenue, but the economics are more modest. That doesn't mean your minerals aren't worth selling — it means your expectations should be calibrated to the actual market here, not to headlines about West Texas.
I got an unsolicited offer letter for my Beckham County minerals. Should I take it?
You should treat unsolicited offers as a starting point, not a final answer. Buyers who reach out cold are typically offering below what they'd pay if they were competing with other buyers. That doesn't mean the offer is dishonest — it just means you haven't tested the market. Before you respond, find out what formation your acreage is in, whether there's any nearby drilling activity, and what comparable transactions look like. A free valuation from a third party costs you nothing and gives you real negotiating context.

Find Out What Your Beckham County Minerals Are Worth

You don't have to figure this out alone. We work with mineral owners in Beckham County regularly and can give you a straight, honest assessment of what your acreage is likely worth in today's market — no pressure, no obligation. If you want to sell, we can help. If you want to hold, we'll tell you why that might make sense too. The first conversation is free.

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