U.S. Rig Count Rises for Second Consecutive Week – Baker Hughes

April 28, 2025

U.S. drilling activity showed a modest rebound this week, with energy firms adding rigs for the second consecutive week — the first such streak since February 2025. According to the latest Baker Hughes report, the total number of active oil and gas rigs rose by two to 587, although overall rig activity remains below last year’s levels. The industry continues to navigate a challenging environment shaped by lower commodity prices, rising construction costs due to tariffs, and a growing emphasis on shareholder returns over production growth. Notably, Oklahoma led the gains with an increase of two rigs, while other major producing states such as Texas and New Mexico remained steady.

U.S. Rig Count Summary — Week Ending April 25, 2025

🇺🇸 Overall U.S. Rig Count

  • Total Rigs: 587
  • Change from Last Week: +2 rigs
  • Change from Last Year: -26 rigs (-4% YoY decline)
    • Last year same time: 613 rigs
  • Breakdown:
    • Oil rigs: 483 (+2 from last week)
    • Gas rigs: 99 (+1 from last week)
    • Miscellaneous rigs: 5 (-1 from last week)
  • Rig Location:
    • Land: 571 rigs
    • Inland waters: 3 rigs
    • Offshore: 13 rigs (unchanged)

📍 State-Specific Rig Counts

StateCurrentChange vs Last WeekChange vs Last YearNotes
Texas2740No weekly change
New Mexico1000No weekly change
North Dakota320No weekly change
Oklahoma55+2+10Granite Wash play gain
Louisiana300No weekly change
California6+1Up by 1
Kansas21-3Red Top Rig Report source
Colorado80No weekly change
Ohio120No weekly change
Pennsylvania180No weekly change
Utah11-1Down by 1
West Virginia80No weekly change
Wyoming210No weekly change
Alaska100No weekly change

📉 Broader Industry Context

  • April 2025 Monthly Change:
    • Total rigs fell by 5 rigs
    • Oil rigs dropped by 1; gas rigs dropped by 4
  • 2024 Trend:
    • Rig count down ~5% in 2024 YTD
    • Down 20% during 2023
  • Reasons for Rig Count Decline:
    • Lower oil and gas prices
    • Focus on shareholder returns and debt repayment
    • Higher construction costs due to steep tariffs
    • Small shale producers slowing drilling due to low crude prices
  • Service Company Outlook:
    • Baker Hughes and Halliburton both reported lower revenue due to reduced drilling and tariff impact.
    • Baker Hughes revised their 2025 U.S. and Canadian energy firm spending outlook to a low double-digit decline, worse than their previous mid-single digit forecast.

🔥 Key Takeaways

  • This week marks the second week in a row of rig count growth — first time since February 2025.
  • Oklahoma is a bright spot with +10 rigs YoY.
  • Texas and New Mexico, the largest basins, remain flat week-over-week.
  • Broader rig activity remains soft overall, signaling cautious capital spending amid uncertain commodity prices and tariffs.

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