
How Oil Well Investments Work: From the Drill Bit to Your Monthly Distribution
If you've never held a working interest in an oil well, the process can feel opaque — which is exactly how bad actors prefer it. Our approach is the opposite. Every investor who works with us gets a clear explanation of every phase of the investment lifecycle before they commit a dollar. This page is that explanation: what happens when the drill bit enters the earth, what happens when the well starts producing, and what you receive throughout the life of the program.
Request Your Program OverviewPhase 1: Pre-Investment Due Diligence (Weeks 1–4)
The investment begins before you sign anything. Our due diligence process — and yours — happens here.
On our side: we've already evaluated the operator's Texas RRC production history, reviewed the independent reserve engineer's report, analyzed the formation geology against comparable offset wells, negotiated program terms, and assessed the fee structure. By the time a program reaches our investor community, it has passed our internal evaluation.
On your side: you receive our investment package and the PPM. You read both. You verify the operator's RRC history yourself. You share the tax analysis with your CPA. You confirm how the program fits your overall investment strategy. If you have questions, you ask them before you sign — not after. See our invest in Texas oil wells page for the complete due diligence checklist.
Phase 2: Subscription and Funding
Your capital is wired to an escrow account designated in the subscription documents. Most programs hold capital in escrow until minimum subscription is reached — typically 60–75% of the program's total raise. Once the minimum is met, escrow releases, the AFE is authorized, and the operator contracts the rig.
For year-end programs where you're investing for a specific tax year IDC deduction: the subscription deadline, the escrow release, and the confirmed spud date all matter. We manage this timeline actively and communicate deadlines clearly. You should fund capital no later than mid-December for December programs.
Phase 3: Drilling
Intangible Drilling Cost expenses are incurred primarily during this phase. The drilling rig day rate, fuel, drilling fluid systems, directional drilling services, and cementing are all IDC-eligible as they're consumed. This is the phase that generates the Year 1 tax deduction — and it's why the spud date (the date drilling physically commences) is the controlling tax event.
You receive updates on drilling progress per the terms of the operating agreement — typically weekly status reports during active drilling. If any significant geological or mechanical issue is encountered that affects costs or timeline, we communicate it promptly. See oil & gas tax deductions for the full tax treatment.
Phase 4: Completion and Hydraulic Fracturing
- Casing and cementing: Steel casing is run into the wellbore and cemented in place, isolating productive zones from surrounding formations and protecting groundwater.
- Perforation: The casing is perforated at designated intervals (frac stages) using explosive-shaped charges run downhole on wireline.
- Hydraulic fracturing: High-pressure fluid — primarily water mixed with proppant (finely graded sand) — is pumped into each stage to fracture the formation rock. Modern Permian Basin horizontal wells have 30–50+ frac stages. Fractures create permeable pathways for oil to flow from the formation into the wellbore.
- Flowback: After fracturing is complete, the well is put on flowback to recover fracturing fluids. Initial oil production begins during this phase.

Phase 5: First Production and Division Order
The time from spud to first check is typically 60–120 days — 15–30 days of drilling, 30–60 days of completion, and 15–30 days from first production to the first distribution check. We communicate first production milestones and expected first distribution timing throughout this phase.
First production rates are typically the highest the well will ever achieve. Initial production (IP) rates in Permian Basin horizontal wells can range from under 300 BOE/day for lower-performing wells to 1,500+ BOE/day in the strongest formation areas. The IP rate sets the revenue trajectory for the investment — and it declines from day one. See oil well returns explained for the revenue mechanics.
Phase 6: Ongoing Production and Monthly Distributions
- Monthly distributions: Revenue checks or ACH deposits arriving 30–60 days after each production month, reflecting your NRI revenue share net of operating expenses. We provide monthly statements showing production volumes, realized prices, LOE breakdown, and net distribution.
- Annual K-1: Your Schedule K-1 arrives before tax filing deadlines for the production year, itemizing all income, IDC deductions, depletion, TDC depreciation, and any other tax items from the program. This is the document your CPA uses to complete your return.
- Periodic operational updates: We provide quarterly operational updates on well performance relative to type curve, any LOE trends, and any material events affecting the program.

Phase 7: Long-Term Production and Potential Workovers
At some point during the well's life, the operator may identify a workover opportunity — reperforating new zones, recompleting a different formation, or mechanical repair — that can restore or enhance production. Workovers generate additional costs (potential cash calls) but can extend the well's economic life significantly. Compare structures in our royalty vs working interest guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
What happens if the oil well is a dry hole?
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Can I sell my working interest if I need liquidity?
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What is a cash call in an oil investment?
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What is the difference between a development well and an exploratory well?
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How long does it take to receive my first distribution?
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Understanding Your Monthly Distribution Statement
Every month after production begins, you receive a distribution statement — the document that shows exactly how much you earned, what was deducted, and what your net check amount is. Understanding each line item is essential for tracking your investment's performance and verifying that operator-reported figures are accurate.
- Gross production volume: Total barrels of oil equivalent (BOE) produced by the well during the month. You can verify this independently against the RRC database once it's posted (typically 60–90 days after the production month).
- Realized oil price: The actual price per barrel the operator received for your oil during the month — not WTI benchmark, but the posted price minus any basis differential and transportation deduction. Core Permian Basin wells typically realize WTI minus $1–$3.
- Gross revenue: Production volume × realized price. This is the total revenue before any deductions.
- Your Net Revenue Interest (NRI): Your working interest percentage minus the royalty burden. If you own 5% WI and the royalty burden is 25%, your NRI is 3.75% (5% × 75%). Your share of gross revenue = gross revenue × your NRI.
- Lease Operating Expenses (LOE): Your proportionate share of monthly operating costs — artificial lift electricity, well maintenance, saltwater disposal, chemical treatments, insurance, and field supervision. LOE typically runs $5–$12 per BOE in Permian Basin horizontals, rising as wells mature and water production increases.
- Severance and ad valorem taxes: Texas levies a 4.6% severance tax on oil production, deducted at the wellhead. Ad valorem (property) taxes on the mineral interest are also assessed annually.
- Net distribution: Gross revenue × NRI − LOE − taxes = your monthly check. This is the number that hits your bank account.
Investment Lifecycle Overview
Oil Well Investment Lifecycle
From capital deployment to monthly production income
Due Diligence & Subscription
Weeks 1–4
Review PPM, verify operator RRC history, sign subscription docs, wire capital
Drilling
Weeks 5–10
Rig mobilization, spud date (controls tax year), drill to target depth, log formations
Completion & Fracturing
Weeks 11–16
Casing, cementing, hydraulic fracturing, flowback, and initial production test
First Production
Months 4–6
Division order executed, first oil sales, production data reported to RRC
Monthly Distributions
Month 6+
Monthly revenue check: Production × WTI Price × NRI – LOE = Your Distribution
Decline & Long-Term Income
Years 2–20+
Natural decline curve: 40–60% Year 1, flattening to 8–15% terminal decline
The Non-Operator's Role: What You Do and Don't Control
The information on this page is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice, tax advice, or legal advice. Oil and gas working interest investments involve significant risks including commodity price volatility, geological risk, operational risk, and potential loss of entire invested capital. All tax benefit descriptions reference IRC provisions as currently in effect; tax law is subject to change and individual tax treatment varies. All dollar examples and projections are illustrative only — not representations of actual returns. Programs are offered exclusively to verified accredited investors as defined by SEC Rule 501, under SEC Regulation D Rule 506(b). This page does not constitute an offer to sell or solicitation of an offer to buy any security. Consult a qualified CPA, attorney, and financial advisor before making any investment decision.
Request Your Program Overview
Complete this 60-second form to receive our current investment program details.
By requesting information, you represent that you believe you qualify as an accredited investor as defined by SEC Rule 501. This is not an offer to sell or solicitation to buy any security. Programs available only to verified accredited investors under SEC Regulation D Rule 506(b). No obligation to invest.
Accredited Investors Only · No Obligation
Discover If You Qualify for Our Current Program
Complete our 60-second investor questionnaire to receive our program overview.
Request Your Program OverviewBy requesting information, you represent that you believe you qualify as an accredited investor as defined by SEC Rule 501. This is not an offer to sell or solicitation to buy any security. Programs available only to verified accredited investors under SEC Regulation D Rule 506(b). No obligation to invest.
