Wyoming's energy capital — Gillette's coal and energy economy drives workforce housing demand that produces yields unavailable in any Colorado market.
Gillette is the self-described "Energy Capital of the Nation" — a title earned by Campbell County's position as the largest coal-producing county in the United States and a significant contributor to Wyoming's oil and gas production. The Powder River Basin, which surrounds Gillette, contains some of the most significant coal reserves in North America, and the workforce required to extract, process, and transport this resource creates sustained housing demand in a city with limited rental supply.
The energy transition creates a legitimate underwriting consideration for Gillette — coal's long-term trajectory is a factor every serious buyer must address. Experienced Gillette operators point to several mitigating factors: export demand for Powder River Basin coal remains significant, the timeline for structural demand decline is measured in decades rather than years, and Gillette's diversification into oil and gas production provides a partial hedge against coal-specific headwinds. The market has weathered commodity cycles before and recovered — investors with long memories and patience have been rewarded.
Wyoming's operating environment — zero income tax, low property taxes, limited regulatory burden on landlords — creates a cost structure that meaningfully enhances net operating income relative to Colorado. A Gillette asset generating comparable gross income to a Denver asset will typically net more after operating expenses, a fact that sophisticated buyers factor into their underwriting.
Gillette attracts buyers with specific Wyoming energy market expertise and a long-term orientation. Cap rates reflect the cyclical risk premium the market carries, creating entry points that can generate exceptional returns during active energy periods. The buyer pool is smaller and more specialized than larger markets — which means sellers benefit from working with a broker who maintains those relationships and knows which buyers are actively seeking Wyoming assets.
We have transacted in Wyoming energy markets through multiple commodity cycles. We understand what buyers need to see in an offering, how to present energy market risk in a way that is honest but contextualized, and which capital sources are currently active in Gillette. That knowledge is the difference between a closed transaction and a failed process.