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U.S. Oil Drillers Keep Rig Count Rising for 12th Straight Week, Longest Stretch Since 2022

Published Jul 17, 2026
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Summary:
  • The U.S. oil rig count has gone 12 consecutive weeks without a decline, the longest such stretch since January 2022.
  • Baker Hughes Co reported a net increase of seven rigs last week, bringing the national total to 452.
  • Higher oil prices, partly fueled by the Iran war, have encouraged shale drillers to reverse earlier cuts and add rigs back.

The Streak That Keeps Going

Oil drillers in the United States are doing something they have not done in more than four years. They have gone 12 weeks in a row without shutting down a single rig.

Baker Hughes Co, the company that tracks this data every week, says the total count actually went up by seven rigs last week. That puts the national number at 452 active rigs. Before this, the industry had not achieved such a sustained period without a decline since January 2022.

Why the Rigs Are Back

After months of cuts in 2025 prompted by worries over a shale downturn, drillers are now adding rigs back, reversing that earlier decline. The new drilling activity reflects a stronger reaction by shale producers to consistently rising oil prices. Higher prices have been driven by the Iran war.

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What This Streak Means for the Industry

This 12-week period of stability is a marked change from early 2025, when rig numbers declined as fears grew that the shale boom might be fading. The seven-rig increase last week, while modest, signals that producers are gaining confidence in current price levels. Sustained gains in crude - partly fueled by geopolitical risk in the Middle East - have made it economical to bring back rigs that were previously idled.

"The streak also underscores the industry's cautious approach: instead of a rapid ramp-up, operators are adding rigs gradually, testing whether prices will hold," noted a market analyst. This measured pace contrasts with the aggressive expansions seen in past cycles, when a price rally would trigger a much faster buildup. With 452 active rigs, the U.S. is still well below the levels that supported record oil output a few years ago, but the reversal of the earlier downtrend suggests that the worst of the 2025 pullback may be over.

For context, the U.S. rig count peaked at nearly 800 in 2019 before a prolonged decline due to pandemic-era demand shocks and subsequent supply discipline. The current level of 452, while still low, represents a stabilization after the sharp cuts earlier in 2025. Shale producers have learned from past boom-bust cycles and are now prioritizing capital discipline, which explains the measured pace of additions.

Investor focus will now turn to whether the rig count can continue rising in the coming weeks, especially if oil prices remain elevated.

This 12-week streak reflects a significant shift in sentiment among shale producers, who had been reducing activity earlier in 2025 amid fears of oversupply and declining demand. The cautious but steady addition of rigs suggests that operators are now more comfortable with current oil prices, which have been supported by supply concerns stemming from the ongoing conflict in the Middle East. While the total rig count remains far below the peak of nearly 800 seen in 2019, the sustained increase indicates that the industry is stabilizing after the sharp pullback earlier this year.

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