Sell Your Mineral Rights in Johnson County, TX

If you own mineral rights in Johnson County, Texas, you're sitting on acreage in the Barnett Shale — one of the pioneering shale gas plays in the country, with over 4,500 producing wells across the county. The market here is quieter than it was during the Barnett's peak years, but there are real buyers and active operators working this ground right now. Let's talk about what your acres are actually worth today.

ASSET OVERVIEW

Est. per Acre

$100–$800

per net royalty acre

Active Wells

4,500+

Drilling Activity

Core Basin

Barnett Shale

Primary Formation

Primary Resource

Natural Gas

Commodity Type

What You Should Know About Your Johnson County Mineral Rights

Johnson County sits in the southern Barnett Shale play, roughly 30 miles south of Fort Worth, and it has meaningful production history behind it — over 6.4 billion cubic feet of gas has come out of the ground here. That said, this is a mature gas basin, not a red-hot growth story. Drilling activity has slowed considerably from the mid-2000s boom, and most production today comes from existing wells being managed by operators focused on maximizing what's already in the ground. If you've received an offer on your rights or inherited acreage and are trying to figure out what to do, the honest answer is: the value depends heavily on your specific location, whether there are producing wells on your tract, and what commodity prices are doing. It's worth understanding all of that before you make any decisions.

Johnson County Mineral Rights at a Glance

4,500

wells

Producing Wells in County

6,400,000

MCF

Cumulative Gas Production

1,300

BBL

Cumulative Oil Production

$100 – $800

est. per acre

Estimated Value Range (per acre, undeveloped)

Natural Gas

Primary Commodity

Who's Operating in Johnson County

BKV Barnett II, LLC

BKV North Texas, LLC

Eagleridge Operating, LLC

Formentera Operations LLC

Tep Barnett USA, LLC

Diversified Production LLC

What's in the Ground

Barnett Shale

Fort Worth Basin

The Barnett Shale is the defining formation here — it's what put North Texas on the shale map and why Johnson County has thousands of producing wells. It's a gas-dominant play, and while the aggressive drilling phase has passed, operators are still actively managing and producing from existing wells. New drilling is selective, not widespread, so whether your acreage has existing production matters a lot when it comes to current value.

Questions We Hear From Johnson County Owners

I got an offer on my Johnson County mineral rights out of the blue. Should I take it?
Maybe, but don't rush. Unsolicited offers are common in the Barnett, and buyers often low-ball the first bid knowing most owners don't have a clear sense of market value. The offer itself tells you there's interest in your acreage, which is useful information. Before you respond, it's worth getting an independent read on what your rights might actually be worth — especially if there are producing wells on or near your tract.
The Barnett Shale isn't as active as it used to be. Does that mean my mineral rights aren't worth anything?
Not at all — it means the context matters more than ever. Johnson County has over 4,500 producing wells and significant cumulative gas production, which means some tracts are actively generating royalty income right now. If yours is one of them, it has real, calculable value. If you're on undeveloped acreage, the value is lower but not zero — buyers are still acquiring rights in this basin, particularly where existing infrastructure and operators like BKV are already present.
What makes Johnson County different from other Barnett Shale counties?
Johnson County is one of the more active counties in the southern Barnett by well count — 4,500 producing wells is a substantial base. The county seat of Cleburne puts you in a well-established mineral rights market with real transaction history. Unlike some fringe Barnett counties where the geology gets thinner and results are less consistent, Johnson County sits in a part of the play with a long track record of production, which gives buyers more confidence when they're making offers.

Find Out What Your Johnson County Mineral Rights Are Worth

Whether you've just received an offer, inherited rights you didn't know you had, or simply want to understand what's underneath your land — we're happy to give you a straight answer. No pressure, no obligation. Just a real conversation about your specific situation.

Get My Free Valuation

Data Sources

Production and operator figures for Johnson 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 Barnett Shale Counties

Johnson County is part of the Barnett Shale. See the full basin overview, operators, and counties we serve.

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Valuing minerals in Johnson County, Texas

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