Built by buyers who got tired of guessing
Mineral Eagle started as an internal tool for a working mineral-acquisition shop. The problem was never a shortage of data — county clerks, appraisal districts, and state regulators publish enormous amounts of it. The problem was that none of it talks to each other. Ownership lives in one silo, permits in another, production in a third, and the life events that actually put minerals on the market live nowhere at all.
So we built the pipeline we wished existed: one place where a county's owners, wells, permits, and transactions resolve to the same tracts and the same people — refreshed continuously, with every record traceable to its source.
Where the data comes from
- County records — clerk filings, deed records, and appraisal-district rolls.
- State regulators — the Texas Railroad Commission, Oklahoma Corporation Commission, New Mexico Oil Conservation Division, and their counterparts in each covered state.
- Federal sources — BLM records for federal minerals and lease sales.
- Licensed commercial datasets — for rig activity, production detail, and land records where public access lags.
- Public succession records — the life events that put minerals in motion.
Our standards
- Traceability. Every record carries its source and last-updated date. If we can't trace it, we don't ship it.
- Freshness honestly stated. Counties publish on different cadences. We show you the date instead of pretending everything is real-time.
- Verification before action. Our data is a research tool. Before money changes hands, title should be verified against the county record — and we link you straight to it.
A note on the numbers on this site
The county and state statistics published on mineraleagle.com (permit counts, well counts, owner counts) are compiled from the public and licensed sources above. They are research-grade aggregates intended for market orientation, not a substitute for a title opinion or engineering report.
See the minerals before anyone else does.
Ownership records, fresh permits, production trends, and motivated-seller signals — organized into a working acquisition pipeline.