How Much Per Acre For Eagle Ford Shale Gas Leases?
The Eagle Ford shale is the nation’s hottest oil and gas play and oil companies are paying top dollar for leases in areas where the concentrations of oil and natural gas liquids are the highest. The Eagle Ford shale is a rock formation that covers a broad, crescent shaped area that runs from the Mexican border to southeast Texas. Landowners lucky enough to own mineral rights in areas considered to hold natural gas and oil are being approached by landmen, or representatives of oil and gas companies with offers to lease their property. Oil companies are interested in everything from half- acre city lots to multi-thousand acre ranches and the amount of lease payments per acre are all over the place. There have been Eagle Ford shale leases made early on, in potentially marginal areas to the north and south of the main play, for as little as $50 an acre. Some savvy landowners in areas where the production is expected to be incredible, have held out for over $6000 dollars or more per acre. (There are some crazy figures being thrown around these days, who knows what is true at this point.) When you hear figures such as “$22,000 paid by Marathon Oil for Eagle Ford acreage”, realize these numbers are not what landowners are receiving, but are what was paid in transactions between corporations holding already leased land.
How Much Is My Land Worth Per Acre For An Eagle Ford Shale Oil Lease?
Your bargaining power depends on how hot competition is among oil companies for land, how close to producing wells you are and how prolific they are, if you are in the “oil – wet gas” windows of the play, thickness and quality of the shale in your area, the current price of oil and gas and last but not least, how much land you have.
If you are one of those landowners that has not signed a lease yet it is imperative that you consult with a good oil and gas attorney. Aside from reviewing any offers that you have received, they may have some inside knowledge of what the going rate for Eagle Ford shale leases is in your area. You may also want to have a conversation with your friends and neighbors about what offers they have received. Some may be unwilling to disclose what they were paid (most oil leases include a nondisclosure clause) but you may get a ballpark figure.
Why Some Acreage Is Worth More To Oil Companies
All Eagle Ford shale lease acreage is not created equally. Some areas within the shale will prove to produce high volumes of natural gas, others high volumes of oil or condensate. There are marginal areas where little or no production will occur. For the most part, shale plays, like the Eagle Ford, Barnett shale, and Marcellus shale are semi-uniform, in terms of making a producing well near another producing one. EOG Resources, for example, has drilled over 100 wells and not had a “dry hole” in the Eagle Ford shale.
Where Eagle Ford Shale Price Per Acre Is Highest
In the central, “over pressured” area of the Eagle Ford sale, or the “wet gas and condensate – volatile oil windows,” some very high producing wells have been made. Prices per acre for Eagle Ford shale oil leases in the liquids rich zones have reached record levels.
With oil and gas lease rates per acre of between $200 and $6000+, with varying amounts of royalty agreements, it pays to be informed.
Here is a document listing some things you should consider when leasing your land for oil and gas exploration. It is a bit outdated, and contains some advice that does not pertain to Eagle Ford shale leasing, but nevertheless it will give you an idea of things to consider when leasing your land for oil and gas exploration.
oil and gas lease
Another document about oil and gas leasing from Texas A&M University can be found here: Oil and Gas Leasing Tips
Please post your comments below if you have any insight on how much per acre landowners are receiving in your area and check back with this post to read the comments of others.
The Case Against Greed
Here is just something for everyone to ponder. I’m not an O&G landman or big landowner, etc. As a former oil and gas industry employee who worked in horizontal drilling in the Barnett Shale, I started this site to help folks understand what the Eagle Ford shale is and what it is about to become. For small landowners (less than 300 acres) it’s definitely not just about “price per acre” for leases when so much royalty income is at stake. A few months production could make your price per acre for leasing seem like “chump change”. A royalty share of 25% is commonplace in the Eagle Ford shale. Under such terms, the landowner receives a quarter of the revenue from an oil or gas well as long as it produces.
Even with well spacing of around 140 acres, oil companies like a large amount of land on which to drill multiple laterals, dig frac pits, drill Carrizo water wells, etc. There is still lots of country to be drilled and many large ranches to drill on with ideal conditions so smaller tracts of land are less desirable. A competing company is less likely to get into a bidding war for a 100 acre tract in the middle of someone else’s territory . In areas where the land is all divided up, a few “hold outs” may just end up putting off the major oil company who is leasing most of the area, and they might just move on elsewhere for the time being. Laterals of several thousand feet may cross numerous parcels and if there is a landowner holding out because they heard “somebody”, somewhere else got $10,000 an acre when the going price in your area is $1000 an acre, larger companies may get tired of playing games just pass the acreage by, letting leases expire. There is a shortage of frac equipment, trucks, rigs, etc. right now and companies like EOG Resources and Chesapeake are prioritizing what will get drilled and what will not. Not all the land leased on three year terms will be drilled. Big ranches will come first.
Developing this oil play is more like a predictable manufacturing operation, rather than how oil wells were drilled in the past vertically, low tech and with lots of uncertainty. A lot of money and machinery all need to come together in one place and the more room there is, the more that can get done.
The highest price per acre for Eagle Ford oil and gas leases right now are in the “oil and wet gas windows”, are on big acreages, and are free of hassles like landowners nickel and dimeing over lease payments or heirs squabbling. O&G companies are first going where it is “easy and there is oil”. These are just a few things to think about when offered an oil lease on your land.
As a small landowner, if you get a good offer from the oil company who has leased up most of the land around yours, you might do well to take it. Greed may very well backfire on you, and have repercussions for all the other landowners around you. These are just my thoughts and are no substitute for the advice of a good oil and gas attorney.
Chime In!
Please use the comments section below to discuss going rates per acre in your area or to ask questions. No solicitations please!


John where do you go to get production info off the TRC website??? I know how to look up the permit applications but never really look into the production side of it
thanks
Scot:
Go to http://www.rrc.state.tx.us/data/online/index.php
There’s a link for Production Data Query, and Oil & Gas Well Records. I haven’t gotten info from it yet but i think it takes time for data to get online w/ a new well.
Burlington Resources / Butler A-304 Well #2 / Dewitt County
Completion report filed today at TRRC for this very strong well.
7.5 mmcfd of gas + 1,348 Bbl of oil/condesate was the official IP report.
DGaar,
If you would like to hear about an opportunity to have your acreage considered by more producers please give me a call, I would be happy to talk to you about Bayless Mineral Right http://www.baylessmineralright.com It is important that land owners work together. Please call me if you are interested.
210-428-4590. Thanks, Laurie
DGaar, in response to your earlier query, the ones we’ve heard about the most are Maverick, TS Dudley, and Omimax (sp?)
Anyone have any experience with Blue Lacy leasing land in Fayette county??? Curious as to whether or not they have actually paid any of their drafts yet. They have made a competetive offer, but not sure if they are worth dealing with.
I’d be curious about that too. The only ones I’ve heard that have actually paid are Southern Bay and Omimex.
That’s one of the problems with the drafts. The smaller lease agents have to flip the contract in order to be able to pay the draft. Then, what happens if they don’t find a buyer?
Oil window acreage is going up in value substantially. Everything is negotiable, lease bonus, royalty, surface use………it’s the hottest play there is.
Hey Orca, what exactly is your goal on this blog?? What are you trying to achieve? You talk randomly about things, and haven’t told the truth yet. You also haven’t responded to anyone’s criticism of you. Therefore i ask again, what is your objective? You come on here and tell landowners to basically hold out for money they will never get paid. Admittedly, i am on the o&g side given the fact that i buy, lease and sell minerals, but going around telling people to hold out for $30,000/acre and 30% royalty is just plain irresponsible. Try gaining some facts before spitting out numbers like that. I just dont understand your random posts. Please explain to me…
A couple of years ago lease bonuses were $300 per acre and 20% royalty. Since then the price has skyrocketed to around ten times that and 25% royalty standard offers. Who is to say this increase in value won’t continue? Those who are patient will see tremendously higher offers than what is being offered today. Game on!
That sounds like greed to me. Take a fair offer now or pay for it later when everyone dogs you for it. My neighbor next to us turned down his last 2 offers, not nobody is interested in him now. Plus everyone around him is signed. Nobody wants his stand alone property now.
Maxwell,
Please forward my name and number to your neighbor, and I will see if there is anything I can do to help him out.
Thanks,
Laurie
210-428-4590
My definition of greed would be someone trying to buy a winning lottery ticket for less than the prize money. Similarly, buying mineral estates for less than market value is the same. Not selling today may prove to be the wise course of action. Leasing is going to get a lot more expensive as time goes by.
Does anyone know if the Eagle Ford Shale extends into Duval/Webb county border off of County Road 311 where other companies are currently drilling known as the El Vella Sand? This is close to Benavides.
Just curious if anyone owning land between Waelder and Moulton has leased. I have 200 acres in NE Gonzales County and have leased for seismic testing (twice) in the last month, but no oil/gas leasing yet.
I have a company that is interested in NE Gonzales County, particularly that area. Please email me @ bluewavemp@gmail.com.
Has anyone heard of companies now offering $3000-$4000 and acres to release all mineral rights on your property? My Dad received a letter in the mail last week with that offer in Moulton.
Daryl,
Avoid selling your mineral rights at all costs, unless you have an emergency situation. If you sell your mineral rights outright you could lose out on many times that amount or more in royalties if you get production, which is very likely. Just my opinion.
Is there any leasing going on 5 miles west of Three Rivers , Tx.? I have partial mineral rights on abt. 700 acres.
Daryl,
Landmen were all over Fayette County but all wanted to LEASE land for possible drilling.
I’m not sure what you mean by ‘release all mineral rights’. If it was me, I’d start by trying to research the company that sent the letter. Then, I think I’d check with neighbors to see if they’ve gotten the same letter.
The company may actually want to buy your dad’s mineral rights. Good luck.
We have land in Central/South Colorado County. 1300 acres. If I can get it freed up, what are the chances that I would be able to lease it for this Eagle Ford Shale play???
You might go in to Schulenburg to the Omimex office they’ve set up on Main St. They are leasing a lot of property in Fayette and parts of Lavaca counties. As you probably know, location is key.
My family owns a mineral interest in 90+ acres in DeWitt County. Although I think we are too far east to be in the Eagleford Shale I would still like to pursue this. What companies would you suggest I contact about a possible lease?
Id like to talk to you about your options. Please email me at jhorner@aceindependent.com
I own 70 acres in Webb County 10 miles east of Oilton Texas. Can you tell me if any activity is going on over there or am I too far out?