Sell Your Mineral Rights in Kingfisher County, OK

If you own mineral rights in Kingfisher County, you're sitting in the heart of Oklahoma's STACK play — one of the more active unconventional basins in the mid-continent. With over 2,200 producing wells and operators like Devon Energy and Coterra active in the area, there's real value here worth understanding before you make any decisions.

ASSET OVERVIEW

Est. per Acre

$500–$3,000

per net royalty acre

Active Wells

2,236+

Drilling Activity

Core Basin

STACK

Primary Formation

Primary Resource

Oil & Gas

Commodity Type

What You Actually Have in Kingfisher County

Kingfisher County sits squarely in the STACK play, which targets stacked formations — primarily the Meramec and Osage — that produce both oil and gas. With 2,236 producing wells on record and major operators including Devon Energy and Coterra Energy maintaining active positions here, this is not a quiet or speculative county. Cumulative production has already reached nearly a million barrels of oil and close to 12 billion cubic feet of gas, which tells you this acreage has been meaningfully developed. That said, value varies a lot depending on where exactly your minerals are located, what's been produced, and whether there's any undeveloped upside left — so before you accept an offer or make any moves, it's worth getting a clear picture of what yours are specifically worth.

Kingfisher County by the Numbers

2,236

wells

Producing Wells

970,300

BBL

Cumulative Oil Production

11,900,000

MCF

Cumulative Gas Production

$500 – $3,000

per acre

Estimated Value Range (per acre, estimate only)

Oil & Gas

both

Primary Commodity

Who's Operating in Kingfisher County

Devon Energy Production Company LP

DVN

Coterra Energy Operating Co.

CTRA

Citizen Energy III LLC

Chisholm Oil And Gas Operating LLC

Crawley Petroleum Corporation

Bce-Mach III LLC

What's in the Ground

Meramec

STACK

The Meramec is the primary STACK target in Kingfisher County — a tight limestone formation that has been the focus of most horizontal drilling activity in recent years. It produces a mix of oil and gas, and its thickness and quality across Kingfisher have attracted major operators like Devon and Coterra.

Osage

STACK

The Osage sits just below the Meramec and is part of what makes the STACK play attractive — multiple stacked zones can be developed from a single surface location. It's an oil-weighted formation that has seen increasing activity as operators look to extract value from multiple intervals on a single lease.

Woodford

STACK

The Woodford Shale is the deepest of the main STACK targets in this area and is primarily a gas-producing formation, though it can carry meaningful natural gas liquids. It's well-understood by Oklahoma operators and adds another layer of potential value to mineral positions in Kingfisher County.

Questions We Hear From Kingfisher County Owners

I got an offer from an operator — is it a fair price?
Offers from operators in active basins like the STACK are often below market value, especially on first contact. Operators make offers based on what works for them, not what's best for you. With 2,236 producing wells already in Kingfisher County and names like Devon Energy and Coterra active here, there's enough transaction activity to benchmark your offer against real market comps. Before you sign anything, it's worth getting an independent read on what your acres are actually worth.
My rights were inherited and I've never done anything with them — what should I do first?
Start by confirming you actually own what you think you own. In Oklahoma, title can get complicated across generations, and counties like Kingfisher have had decades of oil and gas activity that may have affected your interest. Pull your deed records from the Kingfisher County Courthouse and verify the legal description matches what you were told you inherited. From there, check the Oklahoma Corporation Commission's well records to see if there's any production associated with your tract. Once you know what you have, you can decide whether to hold, lease, or sell.
Is the STACK still worth something, or has it already been drilled up?
The STACK has matured since its peak activity years, but that doesn't mean it's tapped out — especially in a county like Kingfisher with multiple productive formations stacked on top of each other. The Meramec, Osage, and Woodford each represent separate intervals, and many leases haven't been fully developed across all three. Operators like Coterra and Devon don't maintain active positions in areas they've written off. That said, not every acre in Kingfisher County is equally prospective, so location within the county matters a lot when thinking about upside.

Find Out What Your Kingfisher County Minerals Are Worth

Whether you just got an offer, inherited rights you've never dealt with, or simply want to understand what you have — the first step is a free, no-pressure conversation. We know this county and this basin, and we'll give you a straight answer.

Get My Free Valuation

Data Sources

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

EXPLORE THE BASIN

Other Anadarko Basin (SCOOP/STACK) Counties

Kingfisher County is part of the Anadarko Basin (SCOOP/STACK). See the full basin overview, operators, and counties we serve.

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