Public land transactions involve unique regulatory frameworks, competitive bidding, and compliance requirements that demand specialized expertise.
Federal, state, and GLO mineral leases are acquired through competitive bidding processes. A landman who understands the nomination process, bid analysis, and lease stipulations can help you acquire acreage efficiently while avoiding overpayment. They track lease sales calendars, analyze competing bids, and prepare proper filing documentation.
NEPA reviews, environmental assessments, cultural resource surveys, and threatened species consultations are all part of operating on public lands. A landman coordinates these reviews, tracks deadlines, and ensures permit applications are complete and properly filed — preventing delays that can cost months.
Public land title research involves navigating federal patent records, state land office archives, railroad grant maps, and complex reservation histories. A landman experienced in government lands knows how to trace ownership from the original land patent through current status — including navigating the unique challenges of Spanish and Mexican land grants in Texas and the Southwest.
Pipelines, access roads, and utility corridors crossing federal or state lands require specific ROW permits (SF-299 applications, FLPMA grants). A landman handles the application process, environmental review coordination, and ongoing compliance reporting required by the managing agency.
Land professionals in our directory have experience across these key agencies.
The GLO manages 13 million acres of state-owned lands and minerals in Texas. Land professionals handle lease nominations, pooling on state tracts, and compliance with GLO reporting requirements.
The BLM manages 245 million acres of public land across the western US. Lease sales, APD permits, and environmental reviews all require specialized knowledge.
States like New Mexico, Wyoming, Colorado, and Montana manage trust lands for public school funding. Each state has unique leasing processes and compliance requirements.
Projects involving national forests, wildlife refuges, military installations, and other federal lands have additional permitting layers and environmental review requirements.
Public land transactions are fundamentally different from private mineral work.
Federal regulations (CFR Title 43), state land codes, and agency-specific rules create a dense regulatory environment that requires specialized knowledge.
Lease sale nominations, comment periods, permit renewals, and compliance reports all have hard deadlines. Missing one can mean losing acreage entirely.
A single project may require clearances from BLM, USFWS, EPA, state agencies, and tribal offices. A government lands specialist manages these parallel workstreams.
Common questions about government lands work.
The BLM conducts quarterly competitive lease sales for federal minerals. Companies or individuals can nominate parcels for inclusion in a sale, then bid at auction. If you win, you pay the bonus bid, first year's rental, and an administrative fee. The lease is typically for 10 years and as long thereafter as there is production. Royalty rates are set by law (currently 16.67% for competitive leases). A landman experienced in federal leasing helps with parcel analysis, bid strategy, and post-sale compliance.
Texas is unique because the state retained ownership of its public lands when it joined the Union (unlike western states where federal lands dominate). The GLO conducts its own lease sales for state-owned minerals — separate from the BLM process. Texas GLO leases have their own royalty rates, pooling requirements, and compliance rules. A landman familiar with the GLO system navigates this state-specific framework.
If your project involves federal or state-managed minerals, you need someone who understands the specific agency requirements. A general landman can handle private mineral work but may not know the BLM's APD process, GLO nomination rules, or NEPA review timelines. Many experienced landmen have worked in both private and public land environments — look for those who specifically list government or federal lands experience.
Mineral leasing on tribal trust lands is managed by the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) and individual tribal councils. These transactions involve additional sovereignty considerations, tribal environmental review, and BIA approval processes. Land professionals who work in tribal areas (particularly in states like New Mexico, Oklahoma, and the Dakotas) understand these unique requirements and the importance of tribal engagement.
Search for land professionals with federal, state, and public land experience. Filter by state, county, and specialization.