North Dakota can reclaim unused mineral rights. A severed interest left idle for 20 years may be extinguished and revert to the surface owner under N.D.C.C. 38-18.1.
Quick answer: In North Dakota, a severed mineral interest is not permanent: it can revert to the surface owner if it goes unused. North Dakota terminates a severed mineral interest after 20 years of nonuse unless the owner records a statement of claim, with notice by publication and mail. The governing statute is N.D.C.C. 38-18.1. To keep it alive, record a statement of claim, or use the interest within 20 years (N.D.C.C. 38-18.1-03). If you may sell, confirm the clock has been met first.
North Dakota reclaims unused severed minerals after 20 years under N.D.C.C. 38-18.1. As of June 2026.
North Dakota terminates a severed mineral interest after 20 years of nonuse unless the owner records a statement of claim, with notice by publication and mail. In practice, if 20 years pass with no use, lease, production, or recorded preservation, the surface owner can move to clear the interest, which makes the last activity date the number that matters.
North Dakota scores 84 out of 100 on the Dormancy Risk Score and ranks number 8 of 51 for how easily an absent owner can lose a severed interest.
North Dakota counts the interest as used by production, by injection, withdrawal, or storage operations, by production from a common vein for solid minerals, by a recorded lease, mortgage, assignment, or conveyance, by a recorded pooling or unitization order or agreement, or by recording a statement of claim under N.D.C.C. 38-18.1-04. One trap to know: paying royalties into an escrow or unnamed account for an owner who cannot be located does not count as use.
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.
Under North Dakota law, regulators can bring an unleased or non consenting tract into a drilling unit, with the owner paid on statutory terms.
Where the estate is split in North Dakota, a surface damages act gives the surface owner a right to notice and payment for disturbance.
Yes. A severed mineral interest in North Dakota is vulnerable after 20 years of inactivity.
It takes 20 years of nonuse, and even then only after the statutory notice and preservation window.
Yes. North Dakota allows forced or compulsory pooling.
Record a statement of claim, or within 20 years take production or record a transaction, lease, or pooling agreement that deals with the interest (N.D.C.C. 38-18.1-03).
American Mineral Registry. Mineral Rights in North Dakota. 2026. https://americanmineralregistry.com/research/states/north-dakota.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 North Dakota code or a licensed attorney before acting.