In the Midland Basin — direct buyer, no brokers, no fees
Sterling County, around Sterling City on the southeastern Midland Basin, produces from the Spraberry and Wolfcamp section that defines the Permian's most active oil play, with extensive University Lands acreage across the county.
Sterling County accesses the Midland Basin's stacked Lower Spraberry and Wolfcamp benches on the basin's southeastern flank, where horizontal development has extended in recent years alongside legacy vertical production.
Operators develop horizontal Spraberry/Wolfcamp wells across Sterling County, including on University Lands tracts, with well results that have drawn growing activity to the southeastern Midland Basin.
Sterling County sits on the southeastern flank of the Midland Basin, where the Spraberry and Wolfcamp section supports horizontal development. Much of the county is University Lands acreage, and values depend on your operator, formations, and decimal interest.
ARB reviews public production data, your operator and formations, decimal interest, and nearby drilling, then provides a free, no-obligation offer with no fee to you.
Selling Sterling County mineral rights to American Royalty Buyers takes four steps: (1) gather your most recent check stub, division order, or lease so you can describe your interest; (2) request a free valuation, in which ARB reviews your net mineral acres, the producing and permitted wells on your acreage in the Midland Basin, and current commodity prices; (3) review the written, no-obligation offer, typically delivered within five business days; and (4) if you accept, ARB handles the title research, curative work, and deed preparation, then funds your lump-sum payment by wire — usually within four to six weeks. ARB is a direct buyer: no broker, and no fees or commissions at any point.
Sterling County produces from the Midland Basin . Explore the full basin hub for more on geology, operators, and selling your minerals.