Wolfcamp Formation Production Data & Well Performance
The Wolfcamp formation is the workhorse of the Permian Basin. Spanning both the Midland and Delaware basins across multiple productive benches, the Wolfcamp accounts for more horizontal wells and more production than any other formation in the Permian. Understanding Wolfcamp well performance is essential for anyone working in West Texas oil and gas.
Wolfcamp Basics
The Wolfcamp is a thick (800-1,500+ feet) organic-rich interval of mixed siliciclastic and carbonate rock. It is typically subdivided into four benches:
- Wolfcamp A — The most commonly targeted interval, particularly in the Delaware Basin. Generally the highest permeability and best oil saturation.
- Wolfcamp B — Widely developed in the Midland Basin. Often the thickest bench with strong production results.
- Wolfcamp C — Less commonly targeted as a standalone interval. Sometimes co-developed with B.
- Wolfcamp D — The deepest bench, sometimes referred to as "Cline Shale" in the Midland Basin. Higher temperatures and pressures.
Midland Basin Wolfcamp Performance
In the core of the Midland Basin — Midland, Martin, Howard, and Upton counties — Wolfcamp wells have delivered strong results:
- Wolfcamp A IP30 oil rates: 800-1,500 bbl/d (varies by lateral length and location)
- Wolfcamp B IP30 oil rates: 600-1,200 bbl/d
- Average lateral lengths: 8,000-12,000 feet (trending longer)
- First-year decline: 60-70% (typical for unconventional wells)
- Estimated ultimate recovery (EUR): 600,000-1,200,000 bbl oil equivalent per well
Pioneer Natural Resources, Diamondback Energy, and SM Energy have posted some of the strongest Wolfcamp results in the Midland Basin.
Delaware Basin Wolfcamp Performance
The Delaware Basin Wolfcamp — primarily in Reeves, Loving, and Ward counties — has different characteristics:
- Higher gas-oil ratios than the Midland Basin
- Wolfcamp A is the primary target (vs. Wolfcamp B in the Midland Basin)
- IP30 oil rates: 700-1,400 bbl/d in the core
- Bone Spring formation stacked above provides additional targets
Devon Energy, Occidental, and Coterra (legacy Cimarex) are among the top Delaware Basin Wolfcamp operators.
What Drives Wolfcamp Well Performance?
Several factors determine how a Wolfcamp well performs:
- Location within the basin — Reservoir pressure, thickness, and oil saturation vary geographically. Core areas significantly outperform the fringes.
- Lateral length — Longer laterals drain more rock. A 10,000-foot lateral will generally produce more than a 7,500-foot lateral in the same area.
- Completion design — Proppant loading, stage spacing, cluster spacing, and frac fluid volumes all affect performance. The industry has generally moved toward higher-intensity completions.
- Spacing — Wells drilled too close together interfere with each other (frac hits, drainage competition). Optimal spacing varies by area and target zone. See our spacing units guide for more context.
Accessing Wolfcamp Well Data
Wolfcamp production data is available through the Texas Railroad Commission and MineralSearch. You can filter wells by formation to isolate Wolfcamp completions and compare performance across operators and counties. For decline curve analysis, monthly production data is available for each well.
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