The distribution of diagenetically-formed clay minerals in Rotliegend dune sandstones of the Southern North Sea Basin is closely related to the following factors: (i) the petrography of the sandstones, (ii) the paleoburial depth and tectonic setting of the area, (iii) the thickness of gas-generating Carboniferous strata underlying the Rotliegendes, and (iv) the facies distribution of the overlying Zechstein. The diagenetic clay minerals are mainly conversion products of feldspars and, to a lesser extent, of detrital clays and micaceous lithic fragments. Sandstones containing dominant drusy illitic and chloritic clay minerals have been buried to depths > 3000 m; if kaolinite is the dominant clay mineral, burial depths were less. Sandstones containing feldspars (detrital and authigenic) up to approximately 7% of bulk volume have permeabilities that are about four times higher than sandstones with similar amounts of kaolinite, and as much as 200 times higher than sandstones with similar amounts of illite and/or chlorite.