2025 Texas Legislative Update | Exemption from Oil and Gas Severance Tax for Certain Restimulation Wells

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TL Fahring focuses on helping individuals and businesses with a wide variety of matters involving state, federal, and international taxation. He has represented clients in all stages of federal and state tax disputes, including audits, administrative appeals, litigation, and collection matters. Mr. Fahring also has used his tax knowledge to assist clients in planning complex domestic and international transactions, including advising as to potential reporting and withholding requirements.

Mr. Fahring received his J.D. from the University of Texas School of Law, where he graduated with high honors and was inducted into the Order of the Coif and Chancellors honors societies. After clerking for a year at the Texas Eleventh Court of Appeals, he attended New York University School of Law, where he received an LL.M. (Master of Laws) in Taxation and served as a student editor on the Tax Law Review.

Among the laws enacted by the 89th Texas Legislature was HB 3159, which provides an exemption from oil and gas severance taxes for certain restimulation wells.

Background

Chapter 201 of the Texas Tax Code imposes a tax at rate of 7.5% of the market value of gas produced in the state by a producer. Likewise, Chapter 202 of the Texas Tax Code generally imposes a tax of 4.6% of the market value of oil produced in this state or 4.6 cents for each barrel of 42 standard gallons of oil produced in the state, whichever results in the greater amount of tax. These taxes are commonly known as severance taxes. The Texas Comptroller estimates the total oil severance tax collected in 2024 as being $6.3 billion and the total gas severance tax collected in 2024 as being $2.1 billion.[1]

There are currently a number of exemptions and reductions in tax rate relating to the oil and gas severance taxes including:

The New Exemption for Production from Restimulation Wells

HB 3159 adds section 202.062 to the Texas Tax Code. This section exempts “hydrocarbons” produced from a “qualifying well” from oil and gas severance taxes for a limited period.

A “qualifying well” is “a restimulation well that has been certified [by the Texas Railroad Commission (the “RRC”)] . . . as a qualifying well.”[7]A “restimulation well” means “a previously completed oil or gas well that, following production of hydrocarbons, became an inactive well and subsequently received a restimulation treatment.”[8] “Restimulation treatment” is “the treatment of an oil or gas well with an application of fluid under pressure for the purpose of initiating or propagating fractures in a target geologic formation to enhance the production of hydrocarbons from the well.”[9]And “hydrocarbons” mean “the oil, gas, condensate, and other hydrocarbons produced from an oil or gas well.”[10]

The exemption lasts until:

The exemption does not apply  to an oil or gas well that:

 Final Thoughts

If you have any questions about how this bill may affect you, don’t hesitate to contact us for a consultation.

[1] Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, Annual Cash Report: Revenues and Expenditures of State Funds for the Year Ended August 31, 2024 at 11.

[2] Tex. Tax Code §§ 202.052(b), 202.054.

[3] Tex. Tax Code § 202.0545.

[4] Tex. Tax Code § 202.056.

[5] Tex. Tax Code § 202.057.

[6] See Tex. Tax Code §§ 201.059, 202.058.

[7] Tex. Tax Code § 202.062(a)(5).

[8] Tex. Tax Code § 202.062(a)(8).

[9] Tex. Tax Code § 202.062(a)(7).

[10] Tex. Tax Code § 202.062(a)(3).

[11] Tex. Tax Code § 202.062(d).

[12] Tex. Tax Code § 202.062(b).