Map preview

Oklahoma Oil & Gas Well Map

Use Future Wells Oklahoma to understand how public Oklahoma oil and gas well records connect across map locations, API numbers, operators, leases, counties, fields, drilling permits, completion reports, production signals, and source documents.

Public demo map

Explore Oklahoma well and activity data

Pan, zoom, search public well records, inspect nearby context, and open public well pages. Producing markers can include source-backed PUN/lease production association where available; location and status details come from OCC RBDMS records.

Oklahoma well records456k
activity events41k+
linked PUNs19k+
PUN monthly rows300
Loading public Oklahoma map...

Data is derived from public Oklahoma Corporation Commission records and may be incomplete, delayed, corrected, duplicated, approximate, or interpreted incorrectly. Map points are discovery aids, not official boundaries or legal, engineering, title, tax, mineral, regulatory, operational, or investment advice.

Preview

API number lookup

Use API identifiers as a direct path into Oklahoma well records when the public source data supports the match.

Preview

County and field context

Move from a county or field name into nearby operators, wells, permits, completions, and production signals.

Preview

Lease and tract clues

Search from lease names, township-range survey clues, sections, units, pools, or rough field notes when you do not yet have an API.

Oklahoma well map workflow

Search Oklahoma wells by the clues people actually have.

A useful Oklahoma oil well map has to support more than one search path. Sometimes you have an API number from a document, a lease or well name from a notice, an operator name from a filing, or a county and field reference from an OCC record. Other times you only have a rough legal description, such as a section, township-range, unit letter, survey, pool, or county clue. Future Wells Oklahoma is designed around that public-record workflow: start with the clue you have, then use nearby wells, activity events, and source context to decide what deserves deeper review.

The public map page stays lightweight. It explains the search model, links to public record entry points, and keeps heavier workflows tied to the map client and source-backed pages while the Oklahoma product is still being tested for performance and data quality.

Search by API number, operator, lease, county, field, section, township-range, unit, pool, or survey.

API numbers are often the cleanest well identifier, especially when a record includes a ten-digit API or another normalized OCC identifier. The map workflow also supports broader exploration by operator, lease or well name, county, and field because many users begin with names rather than identifiers. County pages help narrow the search surface, field pages group related wells and operators, and operator pages show where public well cards and activity signals cluster.

Land and tract clues are more complicated. Public Oklahoma oil and gas records may mention sections, township-range references, unit letters, pools, leases, surveys, and county references without giving a simple parcel boundary. Those clues are useful for discovery, but they are not a substitute for title, mineral ownership, survey, or lease analysis. When you search from a tract clue, the goal is to find nearby wells and related records that help you ask better questions, not to prove a legal boundary from a map marker.

Drilling permits and future well signals.

Searches for an Oklahoma drilling permit map or future well map often start with Form 1000 intent-to-drill activity, amended permit records, location context, nearby operator behavior, and source-document filings. A permit can be an early signal that an operator has requested authority to drill, re-enter, deepen, plug back, or otherwise pursue activity, depending on the form and context. It does not guarantee that a well will be drilled, completed, turned to sales, or produce economic volumes.

Future Wells Oklahoma treats permits as source-backed activity signals. The map workflow is meant to connect those signals with county context, operator context, nearby wells, fields, and follow-up documents. A user researching possible future wells should look for multiple supporting records: permit timing, operator history, nearby completions, production signals, amended filings, and source documents that confirm the record really applies to the area being reviewed.

Completion reports, operator changes, plugging, production, and technical documents.

A well record map becomes more useful when it connects surface points with the rest of the public record trail. Form 1002A completion reports can indicate that a well moved beyond permitting into completed status. Operator-transfer filings can show when responsibility for a well changed hands. Plugging notices and plugging records can matter when reviewing older wells or nearby development history. Lease/PUN production signals can help distinguish wells that appear to have recent production from records that are only permitted, historical, or document-only.

Technical documents, directional surveys, injection reports, status reports, commingling approvals, and other filings can add context, but they also increase the need for careful verification. Future Wells Oklahoma summarizes and links public signals where available; it does not claim that every record is complete, current, or interpreted perfectly. Use the map as a discovery layer, then return to official source documents and qualified review when the decision matters.

Why surface locations can be misleading for horizontal wells.

Many Oklahoma oil and gas wells, especially horizontal wells, cannot be understood from a surface point alone. The surface location may be where the well is drilled from, while the producing lateral can extend far away from that point. A map marker may sit in one section or unit while the horizontal path, completion interval, pool, acreage, or lease context involves a broader area. Directional surveys, permit attachments, completion records, and official filings may be needed to understand the real relationship between a surface location and subsurface activity.

That is why Future Wells Oklahoma avoids presenting map points as legal boundaries, ownership boundaries, or precise subsurface interpretations. The map can help you find records near an area and understand public activity patterns, but it should not be used as a standalone legal, engineering, mineral-title, tax, investment, regulatory, or operational source.

Public preview and deeper map review.

The public preview is intentionally simple. It explains the Oklahoma well map workflow, links to county and guide pages, and keeps search-engine visitors on fast server-rendered content. Deeper review belongs in source-backed pages and interactive map workflows: larger map interaction, API-specific well cards, production rows, source documents, directional-survey geometry, and performance testing around active map use.

Use the public map for statewide discovery, then open Oklahoma browse pages, activity feeds, and source explainers for supporting context.

Data limitations and official-source verification.

Public oil and gas data can be delayed, corrected, duplicated, incomplete, or difficult to normalize. Coordinates may be approximate or transformed from older records. Names can vary across source systems. A lease name, operator name, field name, pool name, section reference, or county reference may not be enough to identify a record with certainty. Future Wells Oklahoma is built to make exploration faster, but it is not an official government website and is not affiliated with the Oklahoma Corporation Commission.

Before relying on a record, verify important facts with official OCC systems, original documents, county records, professional title or land review, engineering review, legal counsel, or other qualified sources. This is especially important for mineral ownership, lease obligations, drilling decisions, regulatory compliance, investment decisions, and legal or tax questions.

Explore public records

Related Oklahoma oil and gas map resources

Use these public pages to move from the map concept into activity, source, county, and guide workflows.

Activity

Daily oil and gas signals

Browse permits, completions, production signals, plugging records, operator changes, and technical documents.

Open activity feed
Sources

Understand the data

Review public-record limitations and the methodology behind normalized Oklahoma well activity.

Review methodology
Guides

OCC source explainers

Read plain-English context for Oklahoma OCC forms, production rows, operator changes, and public data.

Open guides
Top county pages

Start with county context

Oklahoma CountyOpenTexas CountyOpenLeFlore CountyOpenMcClain CountyOpen

Browse Oklahoma records.

Guides

Map research guides

Oklahoma Form 1000 intent to drill explainerReadOklahoma Form 1001A spud report explainerReadOklahoma Form 1002A completion report explainerReadOklahoma Form 1073 operator transfer explainerReadOklahoma PUN production-unit explainerRead

Future Wells Oklahoma uses public and derived data. Source records may be incomplete, delayed, corrected, duplicated, transformed, or interpreted incorrectly. This platform does not provide legal, financial, investment, mineral ownership, title, engineering, drilling, tax, regulatory, or operational advice.

Beta access

Explore Oklahoma well activity in the beta workspace.

Future Wells Oklahoma is currently in beta. Data coverage, search tools, and map layers are actively being expanded and verified.

Request Beta Access