Mineral rights laws by state · Louisiana

Mineral Rights in Louisiana Can lapse / revert

Louisiana can reclaim unused mineral rights. A severed interest left idle for 10 years may be extinguished and revert to the surface owner under La. Mineral Code, La. Rev. Stat. 31:27.

Quick answer: In Louisiana, a severed mineral interest is not permanent: it can revert to the surface owner if it goes unused. Louisiana uses civil law prescription. A mineral servitude reverts to the landowner after 10 years without use, the shortest clock in the country. The governing statute is La. Mineral Code, La. Rev. Stat. 31:27. To keep it alive, drill in good faith or produce within 10 years; recording a notice does not preserve a servitude (La. Rev. Stat. 31:29). If you may sell, confirm the clock has been met first.

Unused minerals
Can lapse / revert
Lapse period
10 years
Surface damages act
No
Forced pooling
Yes
Governing statute
La. Mineral Code, La. Rev. Stat. 31:27
Source status
Sourced
Dormancy risk
100 / 100, rank 1 of 51
Key finding

A severed interest left idle for 10 years in Louisiana risks reverting to the surface owner under La. Mineral Code, La. Rev. Stat. 31:27. As of June 2026.

What this means for owners in Louisiana

Louisiana civil law treats minerals through a servitude that prescribes after 10 years of nonuse, the shortest clock in the country. In plain terms, if no well is actually drilled in good faith and no minerals are produced within 10 years, the servitude reverts to the landowner. Recording a document or signing a lease does not stop the clock here, which is what makes Louisiana unusually unforgiving.

Louisiana scores 100 out of 100 on the Dormancy Risk Score and ranks number 1 of 51 for how easily an absent owner can lose a severed interest.

Keeping a Louisiana interest alive

Louisiana is different from the recording based states. A mineral servitude is lost by 10 years of nonuse, and the only thing that interrupts the clock is actual use of the ground: good faith drilling operations, meaning a well actually spudded in rather than surveying or seismic work, or production of minerals, including from a unit. La. Rev. Stat. 31:29 and 31:36 govern the interruption. Recording a notice does not preserve a servitude. Only operations or production do.

Key case Frost-Johnson Lumber Co. v. Salling Heirs (La. 1922)

The foundational Louisiana decision establishing that a landowner does not own the minerals in place but holds the right to explore for and produce them, which is the basis for the mineral servitude and its 10 year prescription.

Your Louisiana dormancy deadline

Enter the date the interest was last used, such as a sale, lease, recorded filing, drilling permit, or production, to see when it could lapse and exactly what resets the clock.

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Forced pooling in Louisiana

Compulsory pooling applies in Louisiana: a non consenting interest is folded into the unit and compensated as the statute directs.

Surface protection in Louisiana

Absent a surface damages act in Louisiana, surface owner protection comes from the lease and ordinary property law rather than a dedicated statute.

Common questions

Can mineral rights lapse in Louisiana?

Yes. A severed mineral interest in Louisiana is vulnerable after 10 years of inactivity.

How long before unused mineral rights lapse in Louisiana?

The window is 10 years of nonuse, though the statute notice and preservation steps still apply.

Does Louisiana allow forced pooling?

Yes. Louisiana allows forced or compulsory pooling.

How can I keep a severed mineral interest from lapsing in Louisiana?

Conduct good faith drilling operations or produce minerals within 10 years. Recording a notice does not help in Louisiana. Only actual operations or production interrupt the prescription (La. Rev. Stat. 31:29).

Cite this page

American Mineral Registry. Mineral Rights in Louisiana. 2026. https://americanmineralregistry.com/research/states/louisiana.html

This page is a plain language reference compiled from the state code and published legal analysis. It is general information, not legal advice. Confirm against the current Louisiana code or a licensed attorney before acting.

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