Sell Your Mineral Rights in Dawson County, TX

If you own mineral rights in Dawson County, you're sitting in the Permian Basin — one of the most actively drilled oil regions in the world, with over 1,000 producing wells in this county alone. Values here are real and meaningful, and whether you want to sell, lease, or just understand what you have, it's worth taking an honest look before you decide anything.

ASSET OVERVIEW

Est. per Acre

$500–$3,000

per net royalty acre

Active Wells

1,017+

Drilling Activity

Core Basin

Permian Basin

Primary Formation

Primary Resource

Oil

Commodity Type

What You Actually Have in Dawson County

Dawson County sits in the Permian Basin, centered around Lamesa, Texas — and while it may not get the same headlines as Midland or Reeves County, it has a legitimate, decades-long track record of oil production with nearly 7 million barrels of cumulative oil output on record. There are over 1,000 producing wells here, and major operators including Diamondback E&P and Occidental Permian are active in the area — names that do not show up in marginal, speculative counties. That said, Dawson County is not the most intensely drilled part of the Permian, so your per-acre value will depend heavily on exactly where your minerals sit, whether there are existing leases, and how close you are to current drilling activity. Before you respond to any offer or sign anything, it's worth getting an independent read on what your specific acreage is worth.

Dawson County by the Numbers

1,017

wells

Producing Wells (state regulator data)

6,943,971

BBL

Cumulative Oil Production

5,004,255

MCF

Cumulative Gas Production

$500 – $3,000

per acre

Estimated Value Range Per Acre (estimate only — varies by location and lease status)

Oil

Primary Commodity

Who's Operating in Dawson County

Diamondback E&P LLC

FANG

Occidental Permian LTD.

OXY

Apache Corporation

APA

Fasken Oil And Ranch, LTD.

Hibernia Resources IV, LLC

Mule Kick Operating LLC

What's in the Ground

Spraberry

Permian Basin

The Spraberry is one of the most widely developed formations across the Midland Basin portion of the Permian, known for its stacked pay zones and consistent oil production. It has been a workhorse formation for operators in this region for decades.

Wolfcamp

Permian Basin

The Wolfcamp shale is one of the primary targets driving modern horizontal drilling activity across the Permian. Its thick, oil-rich intervals have attracted major operators and made it the most-produced formation in the basin by volume.

Dean

Permian Basin

The Dean Sand is a tighter, less widely discussed formation but has historically contributed to production in this part of the Permian. It often sits above the Spraberry and can add value as a secondary target in multi-zone drilling programs.

Questions We Hear From Dawson County Owners

I got an offer from an operator — is it a fair price?
Operators make offers to buy mineral rights because they believe the value is higher than what they're paying. That doesn't mean the offer is dishonest — it means you should verify it independently before accepting. In Dawson County, with over 1,000 producing wells and established names like Diamondback and Occidental active here, your minerals have real value. Get a second opinion before you sign anything.
My family inherited these minerals years ago and we've never done anything with them. Where do we start?
Start by confirming ownership through the Dawson County Clerk's office in Lamesa — deed records will show you what's in your name and how many net mineral acres you hold. Once you know what you own, you can find out whether those acres are currently leased, producing, or open. From there, you'll have a real picture of what your options are.
Is Dawson County a good place to hold minerals, or should I sell?
Honest answer: it depends on your situation. Dawson County has a real, documented production history and sits in the Permian Basin, so this isn't speculative acreage. But it's also not the highest-activity part of the Permian, which means values are more modest than in Midland or Loving County. If you need liquidity now, selling at today's prices may make sense. If you have patience and no financial pressure, holding through the next development cycle could pay off. There's no universal right answer — it comes down to your financial picture and your risk tolerance.

Find Out What Your Dawson County Minerals Are Worth

We'll take a look at your specific acreage, check what's active near you, and give you a straight answer — no pressure, no obligation. The first conversation is free, and you'll walk away knowing more than when you started.

Get My Free Valuation

Data Sources

Production and operator figures for Dawson 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 Permian Basin Counties

Dawson County is part of the Permian Basin. See the full basin overview, operators, and counties we serve.

CITIES & COMMUNITIES

Cities & Towns in Dawson County

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Valuing minerals in Dawson County, Texas

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