Dormant minerals in Pennsylvania are governed by a particular statutory mechanism, not a simple nonuse clock.
Quick answer: Pennsylvania does not take minerals through a simple nonuse lapse, but it uses a special statutory mechanism under 58 Pa. Stat. 701.1 et seq. (Dormant Oil and Gas Act). Pennsylvania's Dormant Oil and Gas Act does not transfer ownership. It places an unlocatable owner's interest into a trust so the oil and gas can be developed. Stay identifiable in the record; a court may place an unlocatable owner interest into a trust (58 Pa. Stat. 701.1 et seq.).
Pennsylvania does not reclaim idle minerals on nonuse alone; a statutory mechanism applies under 58 Pa. Stat. 701.1 et seq. (Dormant Oil and Gas Act). As of June 2026.
The risk in Pennsylvania is narrower than an outright lapse, but an owner who cannot be located, or who has not met a registration or recording step, can still be affected. Pennsylvania's Dormant Oil and Gas Act does not transfer ownership. It places an unlocatable owner's interest into a trust so the oil and gas can be developed.
Pennsylvania scores 45 out of 100 on the Dormancy Risk Score and ranks number 19 of 51 for how easily an absent owner can lose a severed interest.
Pennsylvania does not extinguish the interest. Its Dormant Oil and Gas Act, 58 Pa. Stat. 701.1 et seq., lets a court place an oil and gas interest whose owner is unknown or cannot be located into a trust, so the land can be leased and developed while the proceeds are held for the owner. Staying identifiable in the record is what keeps an owner in control of the interest.
Pennsylvania uses forced pooling to assemble drilling units, so a single owner cannot block development and instead takes a statutory share.
Pennsylvania lacks a specific surface damages law, so the lease terms and general principles carry the surface owner protections.
Not by simple nonuse. Pennsylvania uses a special mechanism rather than an automatic lapse, so an idle interest is not handed to the surface owner after a fixed number of years.
There is no straightforward nonuse period in Pennsylvania. The interest is handled through a specific statutory mechanism instead.
Yes. A non consenting owner can be pooled into a unit in Pennsylvania.
Stay identifiable in the record. Pennsylvania does not take the interest away, but its Dormant Oil and Gas Act lets a court place an unlocatable owner oil and gas interest into a trust for development (58 Pa. Stat. 701.1 et seq.).
American Mineral Registry. Mineral Rights in Pennsylvania. 2026. https://americanmineralregistry.com/research/states/pennsylvania.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 Pennsylvania code or a licensed attorney before acting.