What Kind of Money Are We Talking About?


The amounts of money that change hands in mineral property transactions can be huge in comparison with the average person’s financial experience. The total yield (lease + royalties) or mineral sale price can often exceed the value of the surface rights. Let’s consider two examples:

Example A: A 100-acre property is completely underlain by a coal seam that is eight feet thick. The owner agrees to let a mining company remove the coal for a royalty of $3 per ton that will be paid upon extraction. Assuming a coal recovery rate of 90%, the owner would be paid nearly $4 million.

Example B: A 100-acre property is drilled for natural gas, and the royalties will be shared by owners of a 640-acre unit that immediately surrounds the well. The property owner is to receive a 12.5% royalty based upon the wellhead value of the gas, which at the time of production is $8 per thousand cubic feet. Assuming an average well production rate of 2 million cubic feet of gas per day throughout the calendar year the property owner would be paid over $100,000 dollars for one year of gas production.

Oil and natural gas transactions involve large sums of money, but the true value can be difficult to estimate – especially in areas where very little drilling has occurred in the past or where deep rock units are being tested for the first time.


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