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Oil royalty investment providing passive production income from Texas wells

Oil Royalty Investments: What You Own, What You Earn, and When Royalties Are the Right Structure

A royalty interest in an oil well is not a passive bond. It's not a guaranteed income stream. And it's not the same as a working interest — which is the most important thing to understand before you decide which structure belongs in your portfolio. What it is: a contractual right to receive a percentage of gross production revenue from an oil well, with zero obligation to pay for anything the well costs to operate. Texas Oil Investments offers royalty participation in Permian Basin programs alongside our working interest offerings.

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Types of Royalty Interests Available to Investors

For investors evaluating the full range of structures, our oil & gas investment opportunities page compares all five investment structures — working interest, royalty, LP, public equities, and ETFs — with their respective tax treatments. Our invest in Texas oil wells page covers the working interest alternative in the same Permian Basin programs. For a head-to-head comparison of royalty vs working interest across 12 factors, see royalty vs working interest.
  • Landowner Royalty (Lessor Royalty): The royalty the mineral rights owner retains when leasing to an operator. Typically 12.5–25% of gross production revenue, carved out before working interest owners receive any revenue. Landowner royalties are the most senior claim on production — they come off the top, before any operating costs or working interest distributions.
  • Overriding Royalty Interest (ORRI): A royalty interest carved out of the working interest — created by an operator or working interest owner and assigned to a third party. ORRIs are junior to the landowner royalty and senior to working interest economics. Typically 1–5% of gross production. ORRIs terminate when the lease terminates.
  • Non-Participating Royalty Interest (NPRI): A permanent royalty interest that does not participate in lease bonuses or delay rentals — only in production income. NPRIs are permanent mineral interests, not lease interests. They survive lease terminations. They can be bought, sold, and inherited independently of the surface and working interest ownership.
  • Royalty Acquisition Fund: A pooled vehicle that acquires a diversified portfolio of royalty interests across multiple operators, formations, and properties. Provides diversification across producing wells and reduces single-well geological risk. Offered as a private placement to accredited investors.

How Royalty Income Is Calculated

Your royalty income is simpler to calculate than working interest income because there are no cost deductions. You receive your royalty percentage multiplied by gross production revenue — nothing more, nothing less. Illustrative only. Not a projection. Royalty income is subject to severance taxes and may be subject to post-production costs depending on lease terms.
ComponentExample (3% ORRI)
Well gross production200 BOE/day × 30 days = 6,000 BOE/month
× Realized oil price6,000 × $70/bbl = $420,000 gross revenue
× Your royalty (3%)$420,000 × 3% = $12,600/month
Less: Your operating costs$0 — royalty owners pay nothing
= Your monthly royalty income$12,600 (pre-tax, illustrative)

Illustrative example only. Actual tax savings and investment returns depend on individual circumstances including tax bracket, AMT exposure, state tax treatment, program structure, and well performance. Not a projection or guarantee of results. Consult a qualified CPA before making any investment decision.

Tax Treatment of Royalty Income

Royalty income is passive income under the tax code — specifically, it's reported on Schedule E of your personal return, the same schedule used for rental real estate income. It is not subject to self-employment tax and is not active income under §469(c)(3).

The primary tax benefit available to royalty owners is the 15% percentage depletion allowance on gross production income under IRC §613A. For every $100 in royalty income you receive, you may deduct $15 as a depletion allowance — reducing your effective tax rate on that income. This deduction continues for the life of the well, even after you've fully recovered your acquisition cost.

What royalty investors do not receive: IDC deductions (no drilling costs incurred), TDC depreciation (same reason), or the §469(c)(3) active income classification. If your primary investment objective is generating a large first-year deduction against your W-2 salary, a royalty interest doesn't accomplish that. The full comparison is at our royalty vs working interest page.

When Royalty Investment Is the Right Choice

Royalty interests serve specific portfolio roles that working interests don't fill as well:
  • Income without liability exposure: If you want production income from oil wells but can't absorb cash call risk or don't want any operational liability exposure, royalties provide clean income with no downside beyond commodity prices and production decline.
  • Passive income to absorb passive losses: If you have significant passive loss carryforwards from real estate that you can't use against active income (because you don't have REPS status), royalty income — which is passive — can absorb those losses. Working interest income is active and can't help with passive loss carryforwards.
  • Complement to existing working interest positions: Many experienced investors hold royalties in legacy producing wells for steady income while deploying new working interest capital into fresh drilling programs for the Year 1 IDC deduction. The structures serve different purposes simultaneously.
  • Lower minimum investment: Royalty acquisition opportunities often begin at lower minimums than working interest programs, providing access to Permian Basin production exposure at $25,000–$50,000 entry points.

Evaluating a Royalty Investment

  • PDP (Proved Developed Producing) vs undeveloped: PDP royalties are in production now and generate immediate income. Royalties on undeveloped acreage require an operator to drill before you earn anything — higher potential, higher geological risk.
  • Production decline profile: Every producing well declines. Review the decline curve for the specific wells included in the royalty acquisition. A well that produced 500 BOE/day two years ago may produce 200 BOE/day today. Current production, not peak production, is what you're acquiring.
  • Operator quality: Your royalty income depends entirely on the operator maintaining production. An operator who fails financially or abandons producing wells takes your royalty income with them.
  • Lease terms: Verify post-production cost deductions, marketing costs, and any other deductions the operator may take from gross production before calculating your royalty payment. Some leases permit these deductions; others do not.

Frequently Asked Questions

How are oil royalty payments calculated?

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Royalty payment = (gross production volume) × (realized oil price) × (royalty rate) × (NRI fraction). For example, a well producing 100 BOE/day at $60 WTI with a 20% royalty rate generates $6,000/day in gross royalties. A mineral owner holding 1% of the royalty interest would receive 1% of that — approximately $60/day or $1,800/month before depletion and taxes.

Are Texas oil royalties subject to state income tax?

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Texas levies no state income tax on individuals. Royalty income from Texas oil and gas production is subject to federal income tax (including the 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax for high-income earners above MAGI thresholds) but not Texas state income tax. This is one of the primary advantages of Texas-based oil investments compared to royalties from Oklahoma (4.75%), North Dakota (2.9%), or other producing states.

What is the typical royalty rate in Permian Basin Texas oil leases?

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Most new leases in core Permian Basin counties command a 25% (1/4) royalty rate in 2026. Older leases may still reflect the historical 12.5% (1/8) or 18.75% (3/16) standard. The royalty rate is negotiated at the time of leasing and significantly impacts mineral rights value — 25% royalties generate twice the income of 12.5% royalties on the same production volume.

How is royalty income from oil and gas reported on my tax return?

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Royalty income is reported on Schedule E, Part I of Form 1040. It is subject to ordinary income tax rates. The 15% depletion allowance (§613A) reduces taxable royalty income — your oil company or program entity should provide a depletion schedule. Royalty income is also subject to the 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax for investors exceeding MAGI thresholds.

What is the difference between a mineral rights owner and a royalty owner?

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Mineral rights ownership is the underlying property right to the oil and gas beneath a tract of land. Royalty interest is the right to receive a percentage of production revenue from a well drilled on that land, which is created when the mineral owner signs an oil and gas lease. Owning mineral rights that are currently under lease makes you a royalty owner. Owning unleased mineral rights means you have rights but currently receive no income.

Mineral Rights Acquisition: The Two Ways Investors Access Royalties

  • Mineral rights acquisition: Purchasing the subsurface mineral estate in a specific tract. If an operator subsequently leases your minerals and drills a well, you receive a lease bonus payment (one-time, ordinary income) and a perpetual royalty on production (typically 1/8 to 1/5 of gross production, paid for the life of the well).
  • Royalty interest purchase: Purchasing an existing royalty stream from an already-producing well. You're acquiring the right to a percentage of an existing production revenue stream, typically priced as a multiple of monthly cash flow. No drilling risk — the well is already producing — but you pay a premium for the certainty.

Royalty Income vs. Working Interest Income: The Full Tax Comparison

Royalty income and working interest income are both derived from oil production but are taxed differently in ways that matter significantly for high-income investors.
Tax FactorRoyalty InterestWorking Interest
Passive activity classificationPassiveActive (§469c3, non-limiting entity)
NIIT (3.8%)Yes — applies for high-income earnersNo — active income exempt
Year 1 IDC deductionNone65–80% of investment
Depletion allowance15% (§613A, subject to limits)15% (§613A, same provision)
1031 exchange eligibleYes — mineral rights qualifyMore complex — consult CPA
Effective rate at 37% bracket~34.7% (37%+3.8% × 85% after depletion)~31.5% (37% × 85% after depletion)

Illustrative example only. Actual tax savings and investment returns depend on individual circumstances including tax bracket, AMT exposure, state tax treatment, program structure, and well performance. Not a projection or guarantee of results. Consult a qualified CPA before making any investment decision.

When Royalties Make Strategic Sense

  • Passive loss absorption: If you have significant suspended passive losses from real estate or limited partnership investments, royalty income (passive) can absorb those losses. A $100,000 passive loss carryforward absorbing $100,000 of royalty income at 34.7% effective rate saves approximately $34,700 in taxes.
  • 1031 Exchange real property replacement: Mineral rights in Texas qualify as real property for §1031 exchange purposes. An investor selling an investment property can exchange into mineral rights, deferring capital gains tax.
  • Lower-risk cash flow in retirement: For investors in or near retirement who want oil production income without drilling risk, royalties on existing producing wells provide predictable (though declining) cash flow without capital calls.
Disclaimer

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.

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