Permian Resources continues to reinforce its position as a top-tier Delaware Basin operator, emphasizing:
- Lower drilling & completion costs
- Consistent well productivity
- Data-driven development
- Capital efficiency over growth
In its latest earnings call, the company highlighted:
- D&C costs of ~$7.25 per foot
- Continued cost reductions into 2026
- Strong execution driven by customized completions
- A development model built on spacing, stacking, and sequencing wells
But what does that actually look like on the ground?
To answer that, we mapped their commentary against a real development dataset (Troubadour – Reeves County, TX) using cadence, surface, and subsurface personas.
Project Overview: Troubadour Development (Reeves County, TX)
- Operator: Permian Resources
- Basin: Delaware Basin (Permian)
- Field: Phantom (Wolfcamp)
- Development Type: Multi-pad horizontal program
Pad-Level Development Structure
| Pad | Wells | Rig | Phase |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pad 1 | 4 | H&P 313 | Core Development |
| Pad 2 | 2 | NorAm 25 | Infill / Extension |
Drilling Cadence by Pad
| Pad | First Activity | Last Activity | Span (Days) | Avg Days Between Wells | Not Drilled |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pad 1 | Jan 17, 2026 | Feb 20, 2026 | 34 | ~6.7 | 0 |
| Pad 2 | Jan 31, 2026 | Feb 20, 2026 | 20 | ~10 | 0 |
Overall Project Cadence
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Total Wells | 6 |
| First Activity | Jan 17, 2026 |
| Last Activity | Feb 20, 2026 |
| Total Duration | 34 days |
| Avg Days Between Wells | ~6.8 days |
Key Cadence Insight
- Pad 1 (core pad) → faster cadence (~6–7 days/well)
- Pad 2 (extension pad) → slower cadence (~10 days/well)
This aligns directly with what Permian Resources described:
“We continue to get more efficient… substantial improvements across all parts of our cost structure.”
👉 Interpretation:
- Efficiency improves as development progresses
- Core pads are optimized first, followed by extensions
Surface Persona: What the Location Tells Us
Geography
- County: Reeves County
- Play: Delaware Basin core
Land Pattern
- Single section development:
- Block 51T7S | Abstract 731 | Section 1
Surface Strategy
- Multi-pad development within same section
- Lease progression (A–F sequence)
- Centralized facility:
👉 TROUBADOUR CTB 1 (Air Permit – same-day approval)
Surface Persona
A high-density, single-section development in the Delaware Basin, leveraging multi-pad drilling across phased leases with centralized facility infrastructure deployed immediately post-drilling.
Subsurface Persona: What They’re Targeting
Reservoir Target
- Phantom (Wolfcamp)
Well Design
- 100% horizontal
- 100% oil/gas wells
Depth Profile
| Pad | Min Depth | Max Depth | Avg Depth |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pad 1 | 10,725 ft | 12,000 ft | ~11,362 ft |
| Pad 2 | 10,725 ft | 12,000 ft | ~11,362 ft |
Subsurface Insight
- Depth variability (~1,275 ft range)
- Same field + same section
- Multiple landing targets
👉 Indicates:
- Multi-bench targeting within Wolfcamp
Subsurface Persona
A multi-zone Wolfcamp development program utilizing horizontal wells with consistent design but variable landing depths, indicating stacked reservoir targeting and co-development.
Are They Using Co-Development?
From the Earnings Call
Permian Resources emphasizes:
- Stacking and spacing optimization
- Interval-specific completions
- Subsurface-driven targeting decisions
From the Data
- Same section
- Same field
- Depth variation across wells
Facility Signal: Transition to Production
Air Permit Timing
| Event | Date | Days |
|---|---|---|
| Last Well Activity | Feb 20, 2026 | — |
| Air Permit Filed & Approved | Mar 18, 2026 | ~26 days |
Insight
- Same-day permit approval
- Short lag from drilling to facility
👉 Interpretation:
- Late-stage development signal
- Facility build already planned
- Rapid transition to production
End-to-End Development Cadence
| Phase | Date | Description | Days from Prior Step |
|---|---|---|---|
| First License | Dec 2, 2025 | Batch permitting | — |
| First Activity | Jan 17, 2026 | Drilling begins | ~45 days |
| Pad Development | Jan 17 → Feb 20 | Multi-pad drilling | 34 days |
| Facility Permit | Mar 18, 2026 | CTB approved | ~26 days |
Cadence Interpretation
1. Permit → Drill (~45 days)
- Structured planning window
- Capital deployed quickly after approvals
2. Pad Development (~34 days)
- Fast, efficient drilling cycle
- Factory-style execution
3. Drill → Facility (~26 days)
- Tight transition to production
- Infrastructure closely aligned with drilling
What Permian Resources Said vs What the Data Shows
What They Said
- Lower costs ($7.25/ft and falling)
- Efficiency gains across drilling & completions
- Data-driven development (spacing, stacking, sequencing)
- Slowing basin activity but improving capital efficiency
What the Data Shows
- Tight drilling cadence (~6–10 days per well)
- Multi-pad, same-section development
- Co-development across Wolfcamp benches
- Immediate facility deployment
Final Takeaway
The Troubadour development is a clear example of how Permian Resources is executing its strategy:
Phase 1: Core Pad Development (Pad 1)
- High-density drilling
- Fast cadence
- Standardized execution
Phase 2: Infill / Extension (Pad 2)
- Slower cadence
- Optimization of spacing
Phase 3: Facility Deployment
- Rapid CTB permitting
- Seamless transition to production
🔑 Key Insight
Permian Resources is operating a tight, capital-efficient development cycle:
- ~45 days → permit to drilling
- ~34 days → full pad development
- ~26 days → drilling to facility
This reflects a modern Permian model combining:
- Standardized drilling
- Advanced completions
- Multi-zone co-development
- Rapid infrastructure deployment



