Sell Your Mineral Rights in Dawson County, TX

If you own mineral rights in Dawson County, you're in the Permian Basin — one of the most actively drilled oil regions in the world. Activity here has been building steadily, and your rights may be worth more than you expect. Let's figure out exactly what you have.

ASSET OVERVIEW

Est. per Acre

$500–$3,500

per net royalty acre

Active Wells

420+

Drilling Activity

Core Basin

Permian Basin

Primary Formation

Primary Resource

Oil

Commodity Type

What's Happening in Dawson County Right Now

Dawson County sits in the eastern Permian Basin, anchored by the county seat of Lamesa, and operators have been quietly building their positions here for years. The Dean Sandstone — a formation that gets much more attention in Dawson than in neighboring counties to the west — has attracted targeted development that makes this county a bit different from the typical Spraberry-focused plays you see elsewhere in the Permian. Drilling activity is real and ongoing, not speculative. If you've recently received an offer or inherited rights here, the timing is worth paying attention to, but you'll want to understand the specifics of your acreage before you make any decisions.

Dawson County by the Numbers

420+

wells

Estimated Active Wells

$500 – $3,500

per acre (estimate, varies widely by location and lease terms)

Estimated Value Range Per Acre

Oil

Primary Commodity

4,500 – 6,500

feet

Dean Sandstone Productive Depth

Permian Basin

Primary Basin

Who's Operating in Dawson County

Pioneer Natural Resources

PXD

Diamondback Energy

FANG

Fasken Oil and Ranch

Private

ProPetro Holding

PUMP

Double Eagle Energy

Private

What's in the Ground

Dean Sandstone

Permian Basin

The Dean Sand is a standout formation in Dawson County and one of the reasons this county has its own character within the Permian. It's a shallower, tight sandstone reservoir that has historically produced oil from vertical wells and has seen renewed interest with modern completion techniques. Not every Permian county has meaningful Dean production — Dawson does.

Spraberry

Permian Basin – Midland Basin

The Spraberry is one of the defining formations of the Midland Basin and runs through parts of Dawson County. It's a silty, laminated sandstone that has been producing for decades and remains a target for horizontal development by larger operators. If your acreage is in a Spraberry unit, you're in well-understood territory.

Wolfcamp

Permian Basin – Midland Basin

The Wolfcamp shale sits deeper and is the major horizontal target across much of the Permian. In Dawson County it tends to be less intensively targeted than in Midland or Martin counties, but it's present and operators factor it into acquisition decisions. Having Wolfcamp rights beneath your acreage adds long-term optionality.

Questions We Hear From Dawson County Owners

I got an offer out of nowhere. Is the Dean Sand activity driving this?
Probably, at least in part. Dawson County has seen renewed operator interest specifically tied to the Dean Sandstone, in addition to the broader Permian activity. When you get an unsolicited offer, it usually means someone has already done the work to decide your acreage is worth buying. That's useful information — it doesn't mean you should sell, but it does mean you should understand the value before you respond.
My rights are near Lamesa. Does location within the county matter much?
It matters quite a bit. Dawson County isn't uniform — acreage closer to established Dean Sand production corridors can be meaningfully more valuable than acreage on the county's edges where development is thinner. Before assigning a value, we'd want to look at your exact legal description, nearby production history, and any existing leases on your minerals.
How do I find out if there are existing leases on my minerals?
The Dawson County Clerk's office in Lamesa is where all oil and gas leases, assignments, and division orders are recorded. You can request records in person or search through the Texas county records system. If you'd rather not spend hours at the courthouse, we can pull that information for you as part of a free valuation review — it's one of the first things we check.

Find Out What Your Dawson County Minerals Are Worth

Whether you just got an offer, recently inherited rights, or have owned minerals in Dawson County for years and never looked closely at them — the first step is a free, no-pressure conversation. We'll look at your specific acreage, check what's been recorded at the Dawson County Clerk's office, and give you a straight answer on what the market looks like right now.

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