Sell Your Mineral Rights in Kingfisher County County, OK

If you own mineral rights in Kingfisher County, you're sitting on acreage in one of Oklahoma's most important unconventional plays — the STACK. Activity here has been real and meaningful, producing both oil and gas from formations that operators have spent serious money delineating. Values vary depending on where exactly your acres sit, but this is not sleepy ground.

ASSET OVERVIEW

Est. per Acre

$1,500–$5,000

per net royalty acre

Active Wells

420+

Drilling Activity

Core Basin

STACK

Primary Formation

Primary Resource

Oil & Gas

Commodity Type

What You Actually Have in Kingfisher County

Kingfisher County sits in the heart of the STACK play — an acronym for Sooner Trend Anadarko Canadian Kingfisher — and your county name is literally in the play's name. That matters. Operators like Devon Energy and Continental Resources have drilled hundreds of horizontal wells here targeting stacked pay zones, meaning multiple productive formations can sit on top of one another beneath your land. That said, the STACK has had some ups and downs in recent years as commodity prices swung and operators got more selective about where they put their dollars. If you've gotten an offer recently, or if you inherited these rights and are wondering what they're worth, the honest answer is: it depends a lot on your specific location and whether there's nearby production. What we can tell you is that this county has legitimate, documented value — it's not speculative farmland with a maybe underneath it.

Kingfisher County by the Numbers

$1,500 – $5,000

estimate

Estimated Value Range (per net mineral acre)

420+

wells

Active Horizontal Wells (approximate)

6,000 – 11,000

feet

Primary Formation Depth

Oil & Gas

both

Primary Commodity

STACK / Anadarko

basin

Primary Basin

Who's Operating in Kingfisher County

Devon Energy

DVN

Continental Resources

CLR

Chesapeake Energy

CHK

Marathon Oil

MRO

Chaparral Energy

CHAP

SandRidge Energy

SD

What's in the Ground

Meramec

STACK / Anadarko

The Meramec is the primary target for most STACK operators in Kingfisher County. It's a carbonate-rich limestone formation sitting roughly 7,000 to 10,000 feet down and producing a mix of oil and associated gas. Devon and Continental have drilled some of their best wells here. It's the formation that put Kingfisher County on the map for modern horizontal drilling.

Osage

STACK / Anadarko

The Osage sits just below the Meramec and is another legitimate target. It tends to be oilier in Kingfisher County, and some operators have found strong results stacking Meramec and Osage laterals in the same section. It's a secondary but meaningful zone — if you have Meramec production nearby, there's a reasonable chance the Osage is on operators' radar too.

Woodford Shale

STACK / Anadarko

The Woodford is a deeper, gas-prone shale that underlies much of the Anadarko Basin. In Kingfisher County it's generally deeper and more gas-weighted than the formations above it. It adds optionality to your mineral package — it's not the primary driver of value right now, but operators who own acreage here often keep an eye on it as commodity prices shift.

Questions We Hear From Kingfisher County Owners

I got an unsolicited offer for my mineral rights. Is it a fair price?
Maybe, but probably not — at least not at first glance. Companies that send unsolicited letters are usually working a specific area they want to lease or buy, and the opening offer is rarely their best. In Kingfisher County, values depend heavily on your exact township and range, proximity to producing wells, and which formations are open. Before you respond to any offer, it's worth getting an independent sense of what the market is paying right now. That's a free call we're happy to have with you.
My minerals have been in the family for decades and there's never been any production. Are they worth anything?
Quite possibly, yes. The STACK play is a relatively recent development — most of the horizontal drilling in Kingfisher County started after 2012. A lot of families have owned minerals here for generations under leases or with no lease at all, and activity is only now reaching their acreage. The key questions are: Is there nearby horizontal production? Have you been approached to lease? Are your depths open or HBP'd by an old vertical lease? We can help you sort through that without any pressure to sell.
What's the difference between selling my minerals and signing a lease?
A lease means you're giving an operator the right to drill for a set period — usually three to five years — in exchange for an upfront bonus and a royalty on production if they drill. You still own the minerals. Selling means you're transferring ownership permanently in exchange for a lump sum. Which makes more sense depends on your financial situation, your age, whether you need liquidity, and how confident you are in the long-term value of the acreage. There's no universal right answer. We'll walk you through both options honestly.

Find Out What Your Kingfisher County Minerals Are Worth

You don't need to make any decisions today. The first step is just a conversation — we'll look at your specific acreage, check nearby production data, and give you a straight answer on what we think your minerals are worth and what your options are. No pressure, no obligation.

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