USGS Finds Oil in Buda Limestone Near Austin

There is confirmed oil and gas under parts of central Texas, including beneath and around Austin, but nobody is breaking out the “black gold” banners just yet. A new federal assessment says the Buda Limestone holds more fuel than previously mapped, offering fresh detail for landowners, drillers, and local officials rather than a ticket to the next big boom.

What the USGS Found

In a June 24, 2026, assessment, the U.S. Geological Survey estimated a mean of about 12 million barrels of technically recoverable oil and roughly 184 billion cubic feet of gas still undiscovered in the Buda Limestone. Since production first started around 1930, the Buda has already given up about 204 million barrels of oil and roughly 287 billion cubic feet of natural gas.

The agency points out that, in the context of national energy use, those numbers are on the small side. The update is part of its long-running effort to map where future exploration might make sense, not a promise that a rush of new wells is about to follow.

Where the Buda Sits in Central Texas

Locally, KVUE reports that the Buda Limestone is exposed at and under parts of the town of Buda and stretches beneath neighborhoods and ranchland to the northeast and southwest of Austin. That footprint makes the new numbers very relevant for a wide swath of central Texas property owners, from suburban cul-de-sacs to cattle country.

KVUE’s June 24 coverage breaks down the federal science in local terms, spelling out what the added subsurface detail might mean for residents, county officials, and anyone whose land sits over the formation. The takeaway is that a technical federal study could quietly influence zoning talks, lease negotiations, and dinner-table conversations across the region.

Geology, Limits, and the Role of the Eagle Ford

Geologically, the Buda does not work alone. The USGS notes that the Eagle Ford Group, a prolific shale unit that sits above the Buda, is the primary source rock feeding oil and gas into the limestone. In its release, the agency also cautions that “the Buda Limestone has little remaining undiscovered oil or gas, indicating a need for new resources,” a reminder that this is a mature play, not a fresh frontier…

Story continues

TRENDING NOW

LATEST LOCAL NEWS