NechesLand.Com Received a Letter?
Who we are

A small team. A defined patch of country.

NechesLand is a focused East Texas landman shop — four counties, two formations, and a handful of professional landmen working title and leases county by county.

Above · A working pumpjack at dusk. The horsehead pumpjack — properly a "beam pump" — was patented in 1925 and remains the workhorse of marginal‑rate oil and gas production across the Texas plays. Most of the surface infrastructure visible across our four‑county area lifts gas from formations far older than the men who built the rigs.

About NechesLand.Com.

NechesLand.Com is a working East Texas landman shop. We acquire oil and gas leases as principal — the lessee on the face of the document is NechesLand.Com itself, on its own account. We are not a broker.

Our work is split between the four counties on this site. We focus tightly rather than chase volume across the state — knowing the courthouse staff in Centerville and the microfilm reader at the Fairfield clerk’s office is, in this work, a real advantage.

Why East Texas.

The Haynesville Shale and the Deep Bossier formation are two productive natural gas plays at depths between roughly 10,000 and 14,500 feet beneath East Texas and northwest Louisiana. The Haynesville was first commercially produced in 2008; the Deep Bossier has been understood as a separate target since the early 2000s.

The four counties we work — Leon, Freestone, Anderson, and Robertson — sit on the western flank of the play, where active drilling continues and where mineral title is often older, more fragmented, and more in need of curative work than in the more‑developed Louisiana parishes to the east. That makes the work — finding owners, running title, taking leases — legitimately useful, not just transactional.

We chose to focus tightly rather than chase volume across half the state. Knowing the courthouse staff in Centerville and the microfilm reader at the Fairfield clerk’s office is, in this work, a real advantage.

Standards.

Our team follows the American Association of Professional Landmen (AAPL) Code of Ethics and Standards of Practice. Several team members hold or are pursuing AAPL professional designations.

Our practical commitments to the people we contact:

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