See what they’re worth first. Then decide.
Skip the brokers, the listings, and the months of waiting. Tell us where to look and we'll call within one business day with a fair, no-obligation cash offer. Accept it and we handle the ADWR paperwork, title, and escrow. You get paid.
We won't pressure you to sell your water rights. We are here to give you information so you can make an informed decision.
Tell us your name and county, or just call. No paperwork or forms needed.
We search the official state ADWR records ourselves and confirm what you own and what type it is.
We evaluate your rights and provide you with a competitive offer, usually within one business day. Let us know if you'd like to proceed with the sale.
Once we agree on a price, you sign and notarize the deed. We handle the ADWR filings, title, and escrow, then wire the funds.
On your own, selling water rights means state filings, title research, finding a buyer, and months of waiting. We do all of it for you.
On your own
You would carry all of this.
With Headgate
We do all of it for you.
If you're not sure whether you own water rights, or what type you own, we'll tell you what they're worth and whether they can be sold.
This might be you if:
Why owners sell
People sell for all kinds of reasons. Plenty of owners hold rights they've never used, tied to land they no longer farm or inherited from family. Selling turns an idle asset into cash and takes the ongoing paperwork off your plate. We won't pressure you to sell; we're here to give you the information to make an informed decision.
Why people sell their water rights
I inherited the family ranch outside Willcox, and the water rights came with it. I’m not farming anymore, and I didn’t want to leave my kids a pile of paperwork they wouldn’t know what to do with. Selling made the whole thing simple.
We had Type 2 rights on land we stopped irrigating years ago. They weren’t doing anything for us, and I wasn’t even sure they could be sold on their own. Turning them into cash made more sense than letting them sit.
After my husband passed, I moved into town and had no use for the rights on our old property. I didn’t know what they were worth until I asked. The money helped me settle in.
I assumed water rights couldn’t be separated from the land. Once I found out the ones I wasn’t using could be sold, it was an easy decision.