An independent guide for mineral owners in APA (Apache)'s active Permian Basin areas — and how to get a free valuation of your interest.
Apache Corporation, a subsidiary of APA Corporation, is a Houston-based producer with a long Permian history. Its recent Permian permitting is led by Upton County in the southern Midland Basin, with additional activity on the basin's northern shelf.
American Royalty Buyers is an independent mineral buyer and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or acting on behalf of APA (Apache). This page is an educational profile built from public regulatory filings for mineral owners whose interests are operated by APA (Apache).
Based on state regulatory filings (Texas RRC and New Mexico OCD), APA (Apache) filed 31 new Permian Basin drilling permits in the trailing 90 days (March 13 – June 13, 2026). Its most active counties:
| County | State | Permits (90 days) |
|---|---|---|
| Upton County | TX | 22 |
| Dawson County | TX | 6 |
Source: Energy Domain DataStream (state regulator filings), data as of June 13, 2026.
If your minerals sit under acreage operated by APA (Apache) — or near its active permits — that activity matters to your value in two ways. New permits signal coming wells, which can mean new or larger royalty checks. And active development by a well-capitalized operator is one of the strongest value drivers buyers weigh when pricing mineral and royalty interests. Focus area: Midland Basin (Upton and Dawson counties, TX).
It also matters when you act: Permian horizontal wells typically decline 60–80% in their first year, so royalty income near a well's peak doesn't last at that level. Many owners use a period of high operator activity to get a current, data-driven read on what their interest is worth.
ARB values interests under APA (Apache)-operated acreage using your net mineral acres, the producing formations, current and permitted wells, and live commodity prices — free, explained, and with no obligation to sell.
If you own a royalty or mineral interest under APA (Apache)-operated wells and are thinking about selling, American Royalty Buyers is a direct, Fort Worth–based buyer — not a broker. You can sell your interest whether or not it is currently producing, and regardless of who operates the wells: APA (Apache)'s consent is not required and your sale does not disturb its leases or operations. We handle the title work, division-order research, and transfer paperwork at no cost to you, and there are never any commissions or fees taken out of your proceeds.
The process is simple: send us your most recent APA (Apache) check stub (or your division order or lease), we build a valuation from your specific interest, and you receive a written, no-obligation offer — typically within five business days. If you accept, most sales close in four to six weeks.
Value depends on your net mineral acres, the producing and permitted wells on your acreage, the formations beneath it, and current commodity prices — not on the operator alone, though active development by APA (Apache) is a meaningful value driver. There is no universal price; the reliable way to learn your number is a free, no-obligation valuation built from your specific interest, which American Royalty Buyers provides with the reasoning explained.
Yes. You can sell your mineral or royalty interest regardless of who operates the wells — the operator's consent is not required, and your sale does not affect the operator's leases or operations. ARB buys interests under APA (Apache)-operated acreage and handles all title and transfer work at no cost to you.
Selling minerals under a APA (Apache)-operated lease takes four steps: (1) gather your most recent APA (Apache) check stub or division order — these identify your decimal interest and the wells or units; (2) request a free valuation, in which ARB reviews your net mineral acres, the producing and permitted wells on your acreage, the formations, and current commodity prices; (3) review the written, no-obligation offer, typically delivered within 5 business days; and (4) if you accept, ARB prepares the deed and handles the title and transfer work, and you receive a lump-sum wire — usually within 4 to 6 weeks of accepting. You do not need APA (Apache)'s permission to sell, and ARB charges no fees or commissions.
Operators often pay royalties through subsidiaries or retain legacy payor names after mergers. Payments connected to APA (Apache) wells may arrive under names such as Apache Corporation, APA Corporation. Your check stub, division order, or lease paperwork identifies the exact payor.
No. ARB is an independent, Fort Worth, Texas–based direct buyer of mineral and royalty interests and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or acting on behalf of APA (Apache). This page is an educational profile built from public regulatory filings.
New permits can mean new royalty income, but Permian horizontal wells typically decline 60–80% in their first year, and future development of any specific tract is never guaranteed. Many owners use a period of high operator activity to capture a strong current valuation. ARB's free valuation gives you a concrete, no-obligation data point to decide.