Sell Clay County mineral rights
What Clay County mineral and royalty interests are worth, who buys them, and how to sell directly to a principal buyer with no commission. Every figure is an estimate subject to verification of your specific interest.
Last updated June 2026.
What are Clay County mineral rights worth?
Clay County sits in the Appalachian Basin and is a steady, established producing county. Producing interests are valued on the standard income multiple, roughly 36 to 72 times your average monthly royalty check, and value moves with natural gas prices. Value rests mainly on existing production, and a steady interest can still be worth a meaningful multiple of its check. This is an estimate, subject to verification of your specific interest, not an offer.
Clay County is Appalachian Basin acreage, in the central West Virginia shallow-gas district. The producing rock under Clay County includes the Big Injun and Benson sand, giving owners a gas-weighted royalty check. Ground Resources, LLC, Diversified Production LLC, and R & R Oil And Gas, LLC are among the operators on record here. Owners in Clay County often sell to convert a long-held interest into cash, to settle an estate spread across several heirs, or because a modest steady check no longer justifies the recordkeeping.
Clay County oil and gas activity
Public state commission records show 1,523 active oil and gas wells in Clay County . These figures are pulled from the state oil and gas commission and are an activity snapshot, not a measure of any one owner's interest.
Top operators in Clay County
The most active operators in Clay County by well count, from the state commission. We name operators because the record is public; this is not an endorsement and implies no relationship.
- Ground Resources, LLC (402 wells)
- Diversified Production LLC (236 wells)
- R & R Oil And Gas, LLC (211 wells)
- Rouzer Oil Company (151 wells)
- Standard Oil Company, INC. (93 wells)
Producing formations in Clay County
The formations and pools that actually produce in Clay County, from the well records:
- Big Injun
- Benson sand
Producing interests in the Appalachian Basin are valued on the standard income multiple, roughly 36 to 72 times the average monthly royalty check, with value leaning on existing production in an established area. Because production is gas-weighted, value moves with natural gas prices. This is an estimate, subject to verification, not an offer.
How Clay County minerals are valued
Producing interests anywhere are valued on a multiple of the income they pay: roughly 36 to 72 times your average monthly royalty check, the same as 3 to 6 times your annual royalty. Average your last three to six checks, then multiply. Where you land inside that band depends mostly on how fast your wells decline, plus the operator, royalty rate, and any undeveloped drilling upside. For the full method and a free on-screen estimate, see what are my mineral rights worth.
Who buys mineral rights in Clay County
Clay County owners hear from brokers, marketplaces, and direct buyers. A broker lists your interest and takes a commission, usually up to 6 percent of your proceeds. Ironwood Royalty is a principal buyer, which means the offer comes from us and there is no commission in the middle. We show you a value range before we ask for anything, explain the undeveloped upside instead of quietly keeping it, and never use a 72-hour deadline to rush a decision on a generational asset.
How to sell Clay County minerals
The order of operations is the same everywhere, and it protects you:
- Know your value range before you talk to any buyer.
- Ask every buyer to quote per net royalty acre so offers are truly comparable.
- Ask directly whether the offer accounts for undeveloped drilling upside.
- Confirm the price is firm and not subject to a quiet reduction during due diligence.
See the full walkthrough in how to sell mineral rights. If you inherited the interest, start with our guide for heirs, which covers recording title and the stepped-up basis that can make a near-term sale very tax-efficient.
Clay County is part of the Appalachian Basin. For the basin-wide value bands and the other counties we buy in, see the Appalachian Basin page.
Clay County mineral rights questions
- How much are Clay County mineral rights worth?
- Producing Clay County royalties are valued at roughly 36 to 72 times your average monthly royalty check. As established acreage, value leans on existing production and moves with natural gas prices. This is an estimate, not an offer.
- What formations produce in Clay County?
- Clay County produces from the Big Injun and Benson sand, which is why a single tract can sometimes be paid from more than one zone. Stacked pay can lift the total value even when each interest looks small. Your value still follows the same income multiple applied to your actual check.
- How active is drilling in Clay County?
- State commission records show about 1,523 active oil and gas wells in Clay County, with operators including Ground Resources, LLC, Diversified Production LLC, and R & R Oil And Gas, LLC. We name operators because the record is public; this is not an endorsement. The activity is a county snapshot, not a measure of any one owner's interest.
Activity data for Clay County: West Virginia DEP oil and gas wells, active status (WV DEP TAGIS ArcGIS public service) (pulled 2026-06-17) . Public record, used with attribution.
See what your Clay County minerals could be worth
Run a free estimate for an honest on-screen range, then talk it through with a real person. An estimate, not an offer, and never any pressure.