Sell Your Mineral Rights in Sequoyah County County, OK

If you own mineral rights in Sequoyah County, you're sitting on acreage in Oklahoma's Arkoma Basin — a long-established natural gas province with a real production history. Values here are more modest than the Permian or SCOOP/STACK, but that doesn't mean your rights are worthless — it means knowing your specific acreage matters more than ever. We can walk you through what you actually have and what it's realistically worth today.

ASSET OVERVIEW

Est. per Acre

$150–$1,200

per net royalty acre

Active Wells

320+

Drilling Activity

Core Basin

Arkoma Basin

Primary Formation

Primary Resource

Natural Gas

Commodity Type

What You Should Know Before You Do Anything

Sequoyah County sits in the Arkoma Basin in eastern Oklahoma, which has been producing natural gas for decades. This isn't a basin in the middle of a shale boom — activity here is steadier and more conventional by comparison, but it's real and ongoing. If you've received an offer, that means someone sees value in your acreage, and it's worth understanding why before you sign anything. Gas prices have been volatile in recent years, which directly affects what buyers are willing to pay, so timing and location within the county can make a meaningful difference in what your rights are actually worth.

Sequoyah County Mineral Rights at a Glance

$150 – $1,200

estimate, varies by proximity to production

Estimated Value Range Per Acre

~320

approximate

Active Wells in County

Natural Gas

Arkoma Basin

Primary Commodity

1,500 – 3,500

feet

Key Formation Depth (Hartshorne)

Arkoma Basin

eastern Oklahoma

Primary Basin

Who's Operating in Sequoyah County

Chesapeake Energy

CHK

Unit Corporation

UNTC

SandRidge Energy

SD

Roan Resources

ROAN

Bluegrass Midstream

N/A

What's in the Ground

Hartshorne Coal

Arkoma Basin

The Hartshorne is the most recognized producing formation in Sequoyah County. It's a coal seam formation that has historically been targeted for coalbed methane (CBM) production. Wells here tend to be shallower and lower-cost to drill, which is part of why this area attracted operators for decades. Production is natural gas, and while it's not a high-IP shale play, Hartshorne acreage with existing wells or nearby production has real, trackable value.

Atoka Formation

Arkoma Basin

The Atoka is a deeper sandstone and shale interval that has been a meaningful gas producer across the Arkoma Basin. In Sequoyah County, Atoka wells have contributed to the basin's gas output over the years. It requires more depth and capital to develop than the Hartshorne, but operators with existing infrastructure have drilled it where the economics work.

Spiro Sand

Arkoma Basin

The Spiro is a sandstone formation that has produced gas in parts of eastern Oklahoma, including Sequoyah County. It's a conventional target — meaning operators have been working it for a long time. If your acreage is in or near an area with Spiro production, that can contribute meaningfully to overall value, especially if there's an active lease in place.

Questions We Hear From Sequoyah County Owners

I got an offer out of the blue. Is my acreage actually worth something?
Yes, but the offer you received probably reflects what the buyer thinks it's worth — not necessarily what you could get if you shopped it around. Buyers in the Arkoma Basin are often smaller acquisition companies or private investors who target areas like Sequoyah County because mineral owners here are less likely to have gotten independent valuations. Getting a second opinion before you respond costs you nothing and can make a real difference.
Gas prices have been low. Does that mean my mineral rights are worth less right now?
It does affect value, yes — mineral rights in a gas-heavy basin like the Arkoma are directly tied to natural gas prices. When prices are depressed, buyers factor that into their offers. That said, buyers are also pricing in future recovery, so if you believe gas prices will rebound (many analysts do, particularly with LNG export demand growing), waiting or negotiating harder may make sense. A realistic valuation will factor in current strip prices and production expectations together.
I inherited these mineral rights and have never received a royalty check. Does that mean there's no production?
Not necessarily — it could mean a few things. The lease may be expired and no one is actively producing. The well may be producing but the royalty payments are going to an old address, or the title hasn't been updated to reflect your ownership after inheritance. Oklahoma has an Unclaimed Property division where unpaid royalties sometimes end up. It's worth doing a title check and contacting the Oklahoma Corporation Commission to look up any wells associated with your legal description. We can help you figure out where to start.

Want to Know What Your Sequoyah County Rights Are Actually Worth?

We'll give you a straight answer — no pressure, no obligation. Just tell us what you have and we'll tell you what we think it's worth and why. If it makes sense to sell, great. If it doesn't, we'll tell you that too.

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