Title 43 › Chapter 7— HOMESTEADS › Subchapter X— STOCK-RAISING HOMESTEAD › § 299
The United States keeps ownership of all coal and other minerals under lands entered or patented here. People who have the right to those minerals may look for and take them, but they must not damage permanent buildings or other long‑lasting improvements and must pay for any crop damage. If someone buys the mineral rights, they may use as much of the surface as needed for mining only if they get the surface owner’s written consent, or agree on and pay damages, or post a bond approved by the Interior Department to guarantee payment for damages. Patents for mineral rights must note these rules. After the effective date, anyone except the surface owner who wants to explore or stake a mining claim must file a notice with the Secretary of the Interior and send the surface owner a certified notice at least 30 days before entering. Low‑impact exploration is allowed during the period that starts 30 days after the owner is notified and ends when the 90‑day filing period (or any extension) ends; that exploration must cause only minimal surface disturbance and cannot use heavy earthmoving equipment, explosives, roads, drill pads, or hazardous materials. Notices must include the filer’s name, contact, and a legal land description. One person and their affiliates may not cover more than 6,400 acres in a State or 1,280 acres affecting a single surface owner. For any mineral work beyond low‑impact exploration, the operator must have the surface owner’s consent or get the Secretary’s approval, which requires a bond to pay for reclamation and permanent losses, a plan showing how damage and disruption will be minimized, payment of a fee to the surface owner (set by the Secretary but not more than fair market value for the surface), and reclamation to restore prior land uses as much as possible. The surface owner can seek inspections (the Secretary must decide on inspection requests within 10 days, or immediately if there is imminent danger), recover compensation for permanent damage, and in cases of willful misconduct or gross negligence may recover double damages plus costs (reduced by any bond payments). State rules and water rights still apply when they do not conflict. The rules here cover exploration, mining, and ore processing for locatable minerals and do not apply to minerals handled under the Mineral Leasing Act, the Geothermal Steam Act of 1970, or the Materials Act of 1947.
Full Legal Text
Public Lands — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
43 U.S.C. § 299
Title 43 — Public Lands
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60