Sell Your Mineral Rights in Marshall County, OK

If you own mineral rights in Marshall County, Oklahoma, you're sitting on acreage in the SCOOP play — one of the more active unconventional basins in the state, producing both oil and gas across 367 recorded wells. The market here is real, buyers are paying attention, and understanding what your rights are worth is a straightforward first step.

ASSET OVERVIEW

Est. per Acre

$500–$3,000

per net royalty acre

Active Wells

367+

Drilling Activity

Core Basin

SCOOP

Primary Formation

Primary Resource

Oil & Gas

Commodity Type

What You Actually Have Here

Marshall County sits in the SCOOP (South Central Oklahoma Oil Province) play, and the production data backs up why buyers are interested — over 14.4 million MCF of cumulative gas and more than 624,000 barrels of cumulative oil have been produced from this county. With 367 producing wells on record and operators like Coterra Energy and Bce-Mach actively working the area, this isn't speculative acreage. That said, not every tract is equal — your value depends heavily on where your acres sit relative to existing wells and which formations run beneath your property. Before you accept any offer or decide to hold, it pays to know what you actually have.

Marshall County by the Numbers

367

wells

Producing Wells (State Data)

624,218

BBL

Cumulative Oil Production

14,491,386

MCF

Cumulative Gas Production

$500

per acre

Estimated Value Per Acre (Low) — estimate only

$3,000

per acre

Estimated Value Per Acre (High) — estimate only

Who's Operating in Marshall County

Coterra Energy Operating Co.

CTRA

Bce-Mach III LLC

Bce-Mach LLC

Cimarex Energy Co Of Colorado

Gladiator Operating LLC

Arrow Energy Inc

What's in the Ground

Woodford Shale

SCOOP

The Woodford is the primary target across much of the SCOOP play and is the formation driving most of the horizontal drilling activity in Marshall County. It produces both oil and gas depending on the thermal maturity window beneath your acreage — in parts of Marshall County, the Woodford leans gassy, which shapes how buyers price it.

Springer Shale

SCOOP

The Springer is a secondary target in the SCOOP that sits below the Woodford and has attracted attention from operators looking for stacked-pay opportunities. Where both formations are productive beneath the same acreage, that stacking can meaningfully increase what your minerals are worth to a buyer.

Sycamore

SCOOP

The Sycamore is a tighter, carbonate-style formation that some SCOOP operators have tested as an additional pay zone. It's less consistently developed than the Woodford but is part of the reason the SCOOP is considered a multi-zone play — and why stacked acreage in Marshall County draws interest.

Questions We Hear From Marshall County Owners

I got an offer letter from an operator near Madill. Should I just take it?
Not before you understand what it's worth. Operators send offers based on what the acreage is worth to them — which often leaves room for negotiation. Marshall County has real production history and active operators, so your rights likely have measurable market value. Get an independent read before you sign anything.
My minerals are in Marshall County but I inherited them and have no idea what's under them. Where do I start?
Start by getting a title review to confirm what you actually own — net mineral acres, royalty fractions, and any existing leases. From there, you can check the Oklahoma Corporation Commission's records to see if there are producing wells on or near your tract. With 367 producing wells in the county, there's a reasonable chance there's already some activity close to your acreage.
Is Marshall County more of an oil play or a gas play — and does that change what I should do?
Marshall County produces both, but the cumulative production figures show gas is significantly more dominant here — over 14 million MCF of gas compared to around 624,000 barrels of oil. That gassier profile can affect buyer pricing, especially in a soft natural gas market. It doesn't mean you shouldn't sell or lease — it just means commodity pricing context matters more here than in a purely oil-weighted county. We'll factor that in when we talk through your options.

Find Out What Your Marshall County Minerals Are Worth

Whether you just got an offer, inherited acreage near Madill, or are simply trying to understand what you own — the first step is a free, no-pressure conversation. We know this county, we know the SCOOP play, and we'll give you a straight answer on what your rights are realistically worth today.

Get My Free Valuation

Data Sources

Production and operator figures for Marshall 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

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

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Valuing minerals in Marshall County, Oklahoma

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