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Federal mineral royalties by state

Fiscal year 2024. Last reviewed June 2026.

Quick answer: In fiscal year 2024 the Office of Natural Resources Revenue disbursed $16.45 billion from oil, gas, and mineral production on federal and Tribal lands and federal offshore areas, including $4.29 billion to 33 states. New Mexico received the most by far at $2.88 billion, followed by Wyoming at $590.92 million and Louisiana at $163.47 million. The table below lists the official ONRR per state amounts.

  • ONRR disbursed $16.45 billion in fiscal year 2024, the fourth largest total since 1982.
  • $4.29 billion of that went to 33 states, and New Mexico received the most at $2.88 billion.
  • 100 percent of the $1.18 billion from production on Native American lands was returned to 33 Tribes and about 31,000 individual Indian mineral owners.
  • Since 1982 the Department of the Interior has disbursed more than $387 billion in mineral leasing revenue.
The numbers

Top states by FY2024 federal disbursement

These are the eleven states that received the largest fiscal year 2024 disbursements from ONRR. The money is the federal government's share of royalties, rents, and bonuses from energy and mineral leases on federal land within each state, plus the offshore Gulf share for the coastal states.

RankStateFY2024 federal mineral disbursement
1New Mexico$2.88 billion
2Wyoming$590.92 million
3Louisiana$163.47 million
4North Dakota$146.66 million
5Texas$100.74 million
6Utah$93.74 million
7Colorado$89.23 million
8Mississippi$52.60 million
9Alabama$52.14 million
10California$46.46 million
11Alaska$30.58 million

Source: U.S. Department of the Interior and the Office of Natural Resources Revenue, fiscal year 2024 disbursement release, November 8, 2024. A complete list of all 33 states and the underlying data is on the Natural Resources Revenue Data portal. Figures are disbursements recorded in the fiscal year and can include corrections for prior years.

What this is

What federal mineral royalties are, and what they are not

When a company produces oil, gas, coal, or other minerals on federal or Tribal land, it pays the federal government a royalty, a share of the value, on top of lease rents and signing bonuses. ONRR collects, audits, and then disburses that money. This is the government's royalty as the owner of public land. It is not the royalty a private mineral owner receives from a lease on private land, which is a separate payment from the operator and never passes through ONRR. If you own minerals under private land, these figures are context, not your check.

Where it goes

How the money is split

Of the $16.45 billion disbursed in fiscal year 2024, $6.32 billion went to the U.S. Treasury, $4.29 billion to 33 states, $3.09 billion to the Reclamation Fund that builds water and power infrastructure in the West, $1.18 billion to Tribes and individual Indian mineral owners, $1.01 billion to the Land and Water Conservation Fund, $413 million to federal agencies, and $150 million to the Historic Preservation Fund. Under the Mineral Leasing Act, most public land states are shared roughly half of the revenue from onshore federal leases within their borders, which is why a production heavy state such as New Mexico receives so much. Four Gulf states, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas, also share offshore revenue under the Gulf of Mexico Energy Security Act.

Use the data

Reuse and attribution

This table is compiled from the U.S. Department of the Interior and ONRR primary releases and the Natural Resources Revenue Data portal. The underlying ONRR disbursement dataset is in the public domain and downloadable as a CSV on data.gov. Our compiled table is free to reuse under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license, with credit to American Mineral Registry and a link to this page.

Common questions

Common questions

How much did states get from federal mineral royalties in fiscal year 2024?

ONRR disbursed $4.29 billion to 33 states in fiscal year 2024, out of $16.45 billion total. The state money is collected from oil, gas, renewable energy, and mineral production on federal land within each state and from federal offshore tracts adjacent to four Gulf states.

Which state receives the most federal mineral royalties?

New Mexico, by a wide margin. It received $2.88 billion in fiscal year 2024, driven by oil and gas production on federal land in the Permian Basin, followed by Wyoming at $590.92 million and Louisiana at $163.47 million.

Where does this federal mineral royalty money come from?

From the royalties, rents, and bonuses that energy and mineral companies pay to operate on federal and Tribal lands and on the federal Outer Continental Shelf. ONRR collects, audits, and disburses it. Since 1982 the Department of the Interior has disbursed over $387 billion in mineral leasing revenue.

How much of the federal royalty goes back to the state?

Under the Mineral Leasing Act, most public land states are shared roughly half of the revenue from onshore federal leases within their borders, with the balance going to the Reclamation Fund and the U.S. Treasury. The exact split is set by federal statute and differs for Alaska and for Gulf offshore revenue under GOMESA.

Do Tribes receive federal mineral royalties?

Yes. ONRR returns 100 percent of the revenue collected from production on Native American lands to the owners. In fiscal year 2024 that was $1.18 billion, disbursed to 33 federally recognized Tribes and about 31,000 individual Indian mineral owners.

Is this the same as the royalty I receive as a private mineral owner?

No. These figures are the federal government's royalty as the landowner of federal and Tribal land. A private mineral owner's royalty from a lease on private land is a separate payment from the operator and is not part of ONRR disbursements.

How do I get the raw data?

The Natural Resources Revenue Data portal run by ONRR publishes disbursements, revenue, and production by state and by year, and the underlying disbursement dataset is available as a public domain CSV on data.gov.

Keep reading

Related

See how each state taxes royalty income on the state mineral royalty tax page, oil and gas output on the oil and gas production by state page, and the law state by state in the mineral rights by state guide.

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