Sell Your Mineral Rights in Love County, OK

If you own mineral rights in Love County, Oklahoma, you're sitting in the SCOOP play — one of the more active unconventional basins in the state, producing both oil and gas across nearly 1,900 wells. Operators like Continental Resources are working this county, which means your rights could be worth more than you think. Let's figure out exactly what you have.

ASSET OVERVIEW

Est. per Acre

$500–$2,500

per net royalty acre

Active Wells

1,900+

Drilling Activity

Core Basin

SCOOP

Primary Formation

Primary Resource

Oil & Gas

Commodity Type

What's Actually Happening in Love County Right Now

Love County sits in the heart of the SCOOP (South Central Oklahoma Oil Province) play, and the activity here is real — nearly 1,900 producing wells have been drilled across the county, and operators including Continental Resources and XTO Energy remain active. This is a dual-commodity basin, meaning the ground produces both oil and gas depending on where you are, and that mix affects how buyers value your acres. If you've recently received an offer from an operator or landman, that's not random — it means someone has done their homework on your specific acreage, and you should do yours before responding. The good news is that Love County has enough development history to give you solid footing for any conversation.

Love County by the Numbers

1,900

wells

Producing Wells (State Regulator Data)

3,463,404

BBL

Cumulative Oil Production

13,122,660

MCF

Cumulative Gas Production

$500 – $2,500

per acre

Estimated Value Range Per Acre (estimate only)

SCOOP

Primary Basin

Who's Operating in Love County

Continental Resources Inc

CLR

Charter Oak Production Co LLC

Kaiser-Francis Oil Company

XTO Energy Inc

XOM

Daylight Petroleum LLC

What's in the Ground

Woodford Shale

SCOOP

The Woodford is the primary target across the SCOOP play and the main reason major operators like Continental Resources are active in Love County. It's a deep, organic-rich shale that produces both oil and gas depending on the thermal maturity in a given area. Wells here can be substantial producers, but they also require significant capital, which is why development tends to be concentrated where operators have already established infrastructure.

Springer Shale

SCOOP

The Springer has emerged as a meaningful secondary target in the SCOOP, offering operators a stacked pay opportunity in certain parts of the play. Where the Springer is productive, it adds value to mineral acres that might otherwise be priced primarily on Woodford potential alone.

Sycamore

SCOOP

The Sycamore is a tight carbonate formation that has attracted attention in the SCOOP as operators look for additional zones. It's not the headline formation, but it represents upside for mineral owners whose acreage sits in areas where operators are testing multiple intervals.

Questions We Hear From Love County Owners

I got a letter from a landman in Marietta offering to buy my mineral rights. Should I take it?
Not without getting a second opinion first. Landmen work for operators or buyers whose job is to acquire rights at the lowest reasonable price. That doesn't make the offer dishonest, but it does mean the opening number is rarely the best number. Love County has nearly 1,900 producing wells and real operator interest — your rights have market value, and you deserve to know what that is before you sign anything.
Love County produces both oil and gas — does that make my minerals more or less valuable?
Generally more valuable, because buyers aren't betting on a single commodity price. Dual-commodity acreage in the SCOOP can attract interest from a broader range of buyers, including those who want oil exposure and those who want gas. That said, where your specific acres fall in the formation — and how close you are to active drilling — matters more than the county average. Location within the play drives value more than anything else.
I inherited these mineral rights and honestly don't know what I own. Where do I even start?
Start by tracking down your deed or the probate records that transferred the rights to you. The county clerk's office in Marietta can help you locate recorded documents. Once you know the legal description of the property — the section, township, and range — you can check Oklahoma Corporation Commission records to see if there are active wells producing on your acreage. From there, a buyer or a mineral rights attorney can help you understand what you actually have and what it might be worth.

Find Out What Your Love County Mineral Rights Are Worth

Whether you've just inherited these rights, received an unsolicited offer, or have been holding them for years and wondering what they're worth — we can give you a straight answer. No pressure, no obligation, just a real conversation about your specific acreage in Love County.

Get My Free Valuation

Data Sources

Production and operator figures for Love 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

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

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