Texas· County Detail
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By Brad Caponigro, Founder · Last updated Jan 2026
Production data through Jan 2026
as of Jan 2026
as of Jan 2026
as of Jan 2026
as of Jan 2026
Over the twelve most recent reported months, Harrison County wells produced about 1.2 million barrels of oil and 509.3 million Mcf of gas — an average of 3,187 barrels and 1,395,257 Mcf per day. That output comes from roughly 3,755 active wells, with 764 permitted locations on file. Monthly volumes have held in a steady band over the past year.
1,163,082 barrels of oil, Feb 2025 → Jan 2026
509,268,792 Mcf of natural gas, Feb 2025 → Jan 2026
Rates shown as barrels of oil per day and Mcf of natural gas per day, computed from monthly totals reported to TX RRC PDQ (county aggregation). Jan 2020 through Jan 2026. Download CSV · See methodology.
| Month | Oil (Bbl) | Gas (Mcf) |
|---|---|---|
| Jan 2020 | 78,032 | 20,463,822 |
| Feb 2020 | 71,749 | 19,839,598 |
| Mar 2020 | 81,562 | 23,456,832 |
| Apr 2020 | 75,553 | 24,204,341 |
| May 2020 | 57,436 | 24,345,707 |
| Jun 2020 | 65,831 | 21,937,004 |
| Jul 2020 | 67,595 | 21,386,031 |
| Aug 2020 | 64,162 | 22,969,571 |
| Sep 2020 | 59,951 | 22,889,860 |
| Oct 2020 | 63,319 | 22,567,388 |
| Nov 2020 | 59,330 | 22,755,742 |
| Dec 2020 | 58,488 | 26,503,247 |
| Jan 2021 | 57,753 | 29,511,368 |
| Feb 2021 | 42,021 | 25,051,611 |
| Mar 2021 | 57,974 | 30,119,233 |
| Apr 2021 | 53,947 | 28,068,584 |
| May 2021 | 52,319 | 27,070,413 |
| Jun 2021 | 54,587 | 26,614,294 |
| Jul 2021 | 53,164 | 26,253,002 |
| Aug 2021 | 53,181 | 29,636,938 |
| Sep 2021 | 47,305 | 32,938,025 |
| Oct 2021 | 64,060 | 33,857,263 |
| Nov 2021 | 79,883 | 34,604,556 |
| Dec 2021 | 84,859 | 34,979,040 |
| Jan 2022 | 57,029 | 31,981,461 |
| Feb 2022 | 74,326 | 28,421,337 |
| Mar 2022 | 87,624 | 31,064,075 |
| Apr 2022 | 83,063 | 28,751,554 |
| May 2022 | 78,780 | 29,088,083 |
| Jun 2022 | 70,254 | 31,748,161 |
| Jul 2022 | 68,828 | 38,181,193 |
| Aug 2022 | 98,266 | 37,401,411 |
| Sep 2022 | 91,685 | 35,111,968 |
| Oct 2022 | 87,708 | 38,877,030 |
| Nov 2022 | 78,173 | 38,422,118 |
| Dec 2022 | 71,874 | 40,258,387 |
| Jan 2023 | 79,594 | 39,211,869 |
| Feb 2023 | 69,392 | 33,045,554 |
| Mar 2023 | 78,112 | 36,718,042 |
| Apr 2023 | 68,915 | 35,995,564 |
| May 2023 | 72,031 | 38,063,002 |
| Jun 2023 | 68,756 | 40,659,873 |
| Jul 2023 | 84,678 | 44,206,775 |
| Aug 2023 | 84,625 | 41,732,757 |
| Sep 2023 | 97,975 | 37,584,486 |
| Oct 2023 | 92,188 | 37,314,775 |
| Nov 2023 | 85,596 | 39,955,122 |
| Dec 2023 | 93,248 | 41,666,186 |
| Jan 2024 | 82,327 | 39,100,912 |
| Feb 2024 | 80,320 | 35,068,705 |
| Mar 2024 | 77,511 | 37,960,799 |
| Apr 2024 | 77,158 | 37,858,816 |
| May 2024 | 71,248 | 39,931,254 |
| Jun 2024 | 78,398 | 39,195,209 |
| Jul 2024 | 79,907 | 40,721,736 |
| Aug 2024 | 75,823 | 43,364,093 |
| Sep 2024 | 107,660 | 44,122,999 |
| Oct 2024 | 115,902 | 45,675,185 |
| Nov 2024 | 112,364 | 44,354,639 |
| Dec 2024 | 107,005 | 47,615,153 |
| Jan 2025 | 105,033 | 46,702,084 |
| Feb 2025 | 93,374 | 41,907,966 |
| Mar 2025 | 99,822 | 47,600,452 |
| Apr 2025 | 97,394 | 47,176,482 |
| May 2025 | 95,195 | 45,323,627 |
| Jun 2025 | 111,170 | 41,746,395 |
| Jul 2025 | 118,499 | 42,585,591 |
| Aug 2025 | 107,313 | 41,487,462 |
| Sep 2025 | 91,788 | 40,652,105 |
| Oct 2025 | 87,569 | 42,191,288 |
| Nov 2025 | 96,638 | 40,089,695 |
| Dec 2025 | 88,084 | 39,422,747 |
| Jan 2026 | 76,236 | 39,084,982 |
| Operator | Parent | Ticker | HQ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rockcliff Energy | TG Natural Resources | Private | The Woodlands, TX |
| Aethon Energy | — | Private | Dallas, TX |
| Comstock Resources | — | CRK(NYSE) | Frisco, TX |
Public-company tickers link to investor relations. Private operators are marked as such and do not carry a ticker.
We also buy overriding royalty interests (ORRIs) and non-participating royalty interests (NPRIs) in Harrison County — common for tracts under leases held by major operators with carried-out royalty structures.
Yes. Harrison 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 Haynesville and Cotton Valley formations.
The most active operators we track in Harrison County include Rockcliff Energy, Aethon Energy, Comstock Resources. We regularly buy interests held under leases with these operators.
Harrison County sits in the Haynesville Shale, where the primary target is haynesville / cotton valley. Here we underwrite the Haynesville and Cotton Valley formations.
Yes. Harrison County is one of our top-tier acquisition areas. We can usually turn an offer around in 48 hours and we will compete on price for tracts inside the active development area.
Harrison County is the other major East Texas Haynesville core county. Production and economics are similar to Panola County, with active drilling of Haynesville and selective Cotton Valley redevelopment. Operators overlap meaningfully between the two counties. Bonuses and royalty multiples for Harrison County interests are typically very close to Panola County comparables, with minor variation by township.
Probably yes. Many Harrison County tracts held by older Haynesville wells have been re-developed with newer wells on the same unit, often at improved completion designs (longer laterals, larger frac jobs). If your unit has additional infill wells planned or recently drilled, the cash flow on your interest is meaningfully higher than the legacy single-well rate. We model the redevelopment upside specifically when underwriting Harrison County interests held by older legacy wells.
Three factors drive the swings. First, Haynesville wells decline very sharply in the first 1-2 years — early-life production can be many multiples of late-life production from the same well, so checks shrink fast on a new well. Second, Henry Hub gas pricing varies seasonally and with broader market conditions, and your realized price is a basis-adjusted number off Henry Hub. Third, the small fractional decimals (often 0.0001-0.001) typical of inherited mineral interests in Harrison County mean even small percentage changes in gross production translate to noticeable check movement. We always look at a 12-month rolling window to smooth these swings during underwriting.
Closings on Harrison 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.
Harrison County sits in the Haynesville Shale, where operators are targeting haynesville / cotton valley. Activity is led by names like Rockcliff Energy, Aethon Energy, Comstock Resources, and new drilling continues to shape the play across the Haynesville and Cotton Valley formations.
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.
Harrison County is one of our highest-priority acquisition areas. Top-tier operators are running active drilling programs here and we're making offers on both producing and non-producing tracts.
Monthly production has held within a normal band over the last year, suggesting steady development without a recent completion wave.