Sell Your Mineral Rights in Haskell County, OK

If you own mineral rights in Haskell County, you're sitting on acreage in the Arkoma Basin — one of Oklahoma's established gas-producing regions. This isn't the Permian, but there's real activity here, real buyers, and depending on your acreage, real money on the table. Let's walk you through what you actually have.

ASSET OVERVIEW

Est. per Acre

$100–$800

per net royalty acre

Active Wells

120+

Drilling Activity

Core Basin

Arkoma Basin

Primary Formation

Primary Resource

Natural Gas

Commodity Type

What's Actually Going On in Haskell County Right Now

Haskell County sits in the Arkoma Basin, which has been producing natural gas for decades — this is not a brand-new play, and that matters. Activity has been modest but consistent, largely driven by coalbed methane from the Hartshorne formation and conventional gas from the Atoka and Spiro intervals. If you've received an offer recently, it's worth taking seriously but not rushing — understanding your acreage position first will put you in a much stronger spot. Values here are real but range widely depending on whether you have producing wells, what formation your rights cover, and current gas prices.

Haskell County Mineral Rights by the Numbers

$100 – $800

estimate, varies by formation and production status

Estimated Value Range (per acre)

~120

producing wells in county

Active Wells (approx.)

Natural Gas

Arkoma Basin is predominantly gas

Primary Commodity

1,000 – 2,500

feet — relatively shallow coalbed methane

Key Formation Depth (Hartshorne)

5,000 – 10,000

feet — conventional gas target

Deeper Formation Depth (Atoka)

Who's Operating in Haskell County

Unit Corporation

UNTC

SandRidge Energy

SD

Chaparral Energy

CHAP

Mustang Fuel Corporation

Private

Newpark Resources

NR

What's in the Ground

Hartshorne Coal / Coalbed Methane

Arkoma Basin

The Hartshorne is the best-known formation in this part of Oklahoma. It's a coalbed methane play — natural gas trapped in coal seams at relatively shallow depths. It's been actively developed for years, and many of the existing producing wells in Haskell County target this interval. Production is steady but not high-volume per well.

Atoka Formation

Arkoma Basin

The Atoka is a deeper, conventional sandstone and shale interval that produces natural gas across the Arkoma Basin. It requires more capital to develop than the Hartshorne but can deliver stronger per-well production when geology cooperates. Some operators have targeted this zone in Haskell County with vertical and directional wells.

Spiro Sand

Arkoma Basin

The Spiro is a shallower conventional sandstone formation that has historically produced gas in southeastern Oklahoma. It's not the primary target for most operators today, but older wells in Haskell County have produced from this zone, and it can still hold value depending on acreage position.

Questions We Hear From Haskell County Owners

I got an offer on my mineral rights — is it fair?
Maybe, but you won't know until you understand the baseline. In Haskell County, offers on non-producing acreage often come in between $100 and $400 per acre. If you have producing wells underneath you, the math changes significantly. Before you respond to any offer, find out whether there are active wells on your tract and what they're producing. That takes about 10 minutes with the right resources — or we can pull it for you.
Is anyone actually drilling in Haskell County right now?
Drilling activity in Haskell County is limited compared to the peak years of Arkoma Basin development. The Hartshorne coalbed methane play is mature, and new horizontal drilling in this county hasn't taken off the way it has in shale-heavy basins like the Permian or Marcellus. That said, there are still operators managing existing production, and the county isn't dormant. If gas prices strengthen, there could be renewed interest — but right now you're looking at a modestly active market, not a land rush.
My family inherited these rights decades ago — do we still own them?
Possibly, but it requires a title check to be sure. Mineral rights in Oklahoma can be separated from surface ownership and passed down through estates — but they can also be sold, partitioned, or clouded by incomplete probate over the years. The Oklahoma County Clerk and OCC records are the place to start. If your family has held these for generations without formal probate, you may want an attorney to help confirm clean title before you sell or lease.

Not Sure What Your Haskell County Rights Are Worth?

That's exactly why we're here. Send us your information and we'll pull the production data, check what's in your area, and give you a straight answer — no cost, no pressure, no obligation. If selling makes sense for you, great. If it doesn't, we'll tell you that too.

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