Pennsylvania· County Detail
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No broker fees. No auction. We close with our own capital.
By Brad Caponigro, Founder · Last updated
Per the state well registry. Per-county monthly volumes are not published for Pennsylvania; well counts and operator activity are the closest proxy for ongoing production.
| Operator | Parent | Ticker | HQ |
|---|---|---|---|
| CNX Resources | — | Private | — |
| Range Resources | — | Private | — |
| Olympus Energy | — | Private | — |
Public-company tickers link to investor relations. Private operators are marked as such and do not carry a ticker.
Recent permit activity: 40 new drilling permits in the last 24 months.
We also buy overriding royalty interests (ORRIs) and non-participating royalty interests (NPRIs) in Allegheny County — common for tracts under leases held by major operators with carried-out royalty structures.
Yes. Allegheny County is on our active buy list. We buy mineral interests, royalty interests, NPRI, and ORRI on both producing and non-producing tracts targeting the Marcellus formation.
The most active operators we track in Allegheny County include CNX Resources, Range Resources, Olympus Energy. We regularly buy interests held under leases with these operators.
Allegheny County sits in the Utica Shale, where the primary target is marcellus. Here we underwrite the Marcellus formation.
Yes — 40 new drilling permits were filed in Allegheny County in the last 24 months. Recent permit activity is one of the inputs we weigh when sizing an offer on undeveloped or PDP-only acreage.
Yes, surface constraints in Pittsburgh and the inner-ring suburbs limit greenfield horizontal drilling, but several outer townships (Findlay, Forward, Elizabeth) host active Marcellus units with operators including Range Resources and CNX. Many parcels in the urbanized core were severed from minerals decades ago for coal — modern owners often hold a fractional interest in the gas estate without owning the surface. We underwrite based on what is actually leased and producing on the unit, not by county-average assumptions.
Pittsburgh-area minerals were heavily severed during the 19th and 20th century coal era. Many tracts have separately-owned coal, oil-and-gas, and surface estates with overlapping or ambiguous reservations. Title work can be substantial — we frequently encounter Dunham-rule questions (Pennsylvania's default that "minerals" excludes oil and gas absent clear contrary intent) and ambiguous depth language. We do the title work as part of underwriting; that's why a clean offer can come back even on a tract the owner thought was a mess.
There is meaningful legacy production from shallow conventional Devonian and Upper Devonian wells across Allegheny and surrounding counties, much of it operated today by smaller producers or run-down by majors that exited Appalachia. Shallow conventional minerals can still trade — value depends on the actual decline curve, operator credit, plugging-liability risk, and any held-by-production exposure to the deeper Marcellus. We send written offers on these without obligation; the math is often more interesting than owners assume.
Closings on Allegheny County mineral rights typically take 7 to 30 days from the date you accept our offer, depending on title complexity. We handle county-level title work, PSA drafting, mineral deed preparation, and notary coordination at our expense.
Just a tract description (abstract or survey, section/township/range, or a legal description from your deed) and any recent royalty check stubs if the interest is producing. You do not need to gather deeds or title opinions up front.
Allegheny County sits in the Utica Shale, where operators are targeting marcellus. Activity is led by names like CNX Resources, Range Resources, Olympus Energy, and new drilling continues to shape the play across the Marcellus formation.
If you hold mineral rights, royalty interests, NPRI, or ORRI anywhere in the county, we'd like to put a written offer in front of you. Every offer we send is funded from our own balance sheet — there's no auction, no broker markup, and no third-party capital waiting to approve the deal.
Allegheny County has steady development activity and we buy here regularly. If you own minerals in the county, we'd like to evaluate your tract.