FORM 10-K
                    SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                         WASHINGTON, D.C.  20549
(Mark One)

[x]    Annual  report  pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d)  of  the  Securities
       Exchange Act of 1934 [Fee Required]

For the fiscal year ended December 31, 2001

                                    OR

[ ]    Transition  report pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities
       Exchange Act of 1934 [No Fee Required]

For the transition period from                      to

Commission File Number 0-16493

               Southwest Oil & Gas Income Fund VII-A, L.P.
                (Exact name of registrant as specified in
                    its limited partnership agreement)

Delaware                                                     75-2145576
(State or other jurisdiction                              (I.R.S. Employer
of incorporation or organization)                       Identification No.)

407 N. Big Spring, Suite 300, Midland, Texas                   79701
(Address of principal executive office)                     (Zip Code)

Registrant's telephone number, including area code   (915) 686-9927

       Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:

                                   None

       Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act:

                      limited partnership interests

Indicate by check mark whether registrant (1) has filed reports required to
be  filed  by  Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act  of  1934
during  the  preceding  12  months (or for such  shorter  period  that  the
registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject  to
such filing requirements for the past 90 days:     Yes   x    No

Indicate by check mark if disclosure of delinquent filers pursuant to  Item
405  of  Regulation S-K (229.405 of this chapter) is not contained  herein,
and  will  not  be  contained,  to the best of registrant's  knowledge,  in
definitive  proxy or information statements incorporated  by  reference  in
Part III of this Form 10-K or any amendment to this Form 10-K.     [x]

The  registrant's  outstanding  securities  consist  of  Units  of  limited
partnership  interests for which there exists no established public  market
from which to base a calculation of aggregate market value.

The  total  number of pages contained in this report is 39.   There  is  no
exhibit index.


                            Table of Contents

Item                                                                   Page

                                  Part I

 1.  Business                                                            3

 2.  Properties                                                          6

 3.  Legal Proceedings                                                   7

 4.  Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders                 7

                                 Part II

 5.  Market for Registrant's Common Equity and Related
     Stockholder Matters                                                 8

 6.  Selected Financial Data                                             9

 7.  Management's Discussion and Analysis of
     Financial Condition and Results of Operations                      10

 8.  Financial Statements and Supplementary Data                        18

 9.  Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants
     on Accounting and Financial Disclosure                             33

                                 Part III

10.  Directors and Executive Officers of the Registrant                 34

11.  Executive Compensation                                             35

12.  Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners
     and Management                                                     35

13.  Certain Relationships and Related Transactions                     37

                                 Part IV

14.  Exhibits, Financial Statement Schedules, and
     Reports on Form 8-K                                                38

     Signatures                                                         39


                                  Part I

Item 1.   Business

General
Southwest  Oil  &  Gas  Income  Fund  VII-A,  L.P.  (the  "Partnership"  or
"Registrant")  was organized as a Delaware limited partnership  on  January
30,  1987.   The offering of limited partnership interests began  March  4,
1987,  reached minimum capital requirements on April 28, 1987 and concluded
September 21, 1987.  The Partnership has no subsidiaries.

The  Partnership  has  expended  its  capital  and  acquired  interests  in
producing oil and gas properties.  After such acquisitions, the Partnership
has  produced and marketed the crude oil and natural gas produced from such
properties.  In most cases, the Partnership purchased working interests  in
oil  and  gas  properties,  with an occasional purchase  of  a  royalty  or
overriding royalty interest.  The Partnership purchased either all or  part
of the rights and obligations under various oil and gas leases.

The  principal executive offices of the Partnership are located at  407  N.
Big Spring, Suite 300, Midland, Texas, 79701.  The Managing General Partner
of  the  Partnership,  Southwest Royalties,  Inc.  (the  "Managing  General
Partner")   and  its  staff  of  89  individuals,  together  with   certain
independent  consultants  used  on an "as needed"  basis,  perform  various
services on behalf of the Partnership, including the selection of  oil  and
gas properties and the marketing of production from such properties.  H. H.
Wommack,  III,  a  stockholder, director, President and  Treasurer  of  the
Managing  General  Partner, is also a general partner.  Effective  December
31,  2001,  Mr. Wommack sold his general partner interest to  the  Managing
General Partner.  The Partnership has no employees.

Principal Products, Marketing and Distribution
The  Partnership has acquired and holds working interests in  oil  and  gas
properties  located  in  Texas, New Mexico, Oklahoma  and  Louisiana.   All
activities  of  the  Partnership are confined  to  the  continental  United
States.   All  oil  and  gas  produced from these  properties  is  sold  to
unrelated third parties in the oil and gas business.

The  revenues  generated from the Partnership's oil and gas activities  are
dependent upon the current market for oil and gas.  The prices received  by
the Partnership for its oil and gas production depend upon numerous factors
beyond   the   Partnership's  control,  including  competition,   economic,
political  and regulatory developments and competitive energy sources,  and
make it particularly difficult to estimate future prices of oil and natural
gas.


For  nearly nine months, despite the fears of a global recession, crude oil
prices  held steady between $26 and $28 per barrel due in part to a  series
of  OPEC  and  non-OPEC production cuts.  Then, following what  has  become
known  simply  as  "9-11",  crude prices plunged  immediately  to  $22  and
gradually  fell  to below $18 per barrel.  Slower demand  across  the  U.S.
caused by the threat of recession and warmer than expected weather also led
to  declining prices in the latter half of 2001.  However, the  oil  cartel
and other non-member countries agreed for the fourth time since February to
curb  output in an effort to stabilize prices.  Crude oil contracts trading
on the NYMEX closed the year at approximately $20 per barrel.

Spot  prices in 2001 climbed to their highest levels ever, with the  yearly
average  price  nationwide reaching $4.14/MMBtu, up  9.77%  from  the  2000
average  of $3.77/MMBtu.  Prices reached their zenith in the first  quarter
of  2001 before beginning a steady decline throughout the remainder of  the
year.   The  terrorist  attacks  of  September  11  knocked  the  New  York
Mercantile Exchange out of the market for several days and shook  the  spot
marketplace into a maintenance mode.  As companies measured the  impact  of
the  attacks on the U.S. economy, spot prices deteriorated further.  In the
fourth  quarter,  prices  bottomed out for the year  with  the  three-month
average  falling to $2.31/MMBtu.  As for 2002, record-high  storage  levels
and  the  expectation of a flat economy through the first half of the  year
are  leading  industry  experts to predict prices to  average  $2.05/MMBtu,
remaining above the $2.00 per MMBtu level for a 5th consecutive year.

Following  is a table of the ratios of revenues received from oil  and  gas
production for the last three years:

                                  Oil          Gas
                    2001          59%          41%
                    2000          63%          37%
                    1999          64%          36%


As  the table indicates, the Partnership's revenue is almost evenly divided
between its oil and gas production, the Partnership revenues will be highly
dependent upon the future prices and demands for oil and gas.

Seasonality of Business
Although the demand for natural gas is highly seasonal, with higher  demand
in  the colder winter months and in very hot summer months, the Partnership
has  been able to sell all of its natural gas, either through contracts  in
place or on the spot market at the then prevailing spot market price.  As a
result,  the volumes sold by the Partnership have not fluctuated materially
with the change of season.

Customer Dependence
No  material portion of the Partnership's business is dependent on a single
purchaser,  or a very few purchasers, where the loss of one  would  have  a
material adverse impact on the Partnership.  Four purchasers accounted  for
63%  of  the Partnership's total oil and gas production during 2001:   Duke
Energy  Field  Services for 25%, Sid Richardson Energy  Services  for  14%,
Plains  Marketing  LP  for  12%  and BP Amoco  for  12%.   Four  purchasers
accounted for 70% of the Partnership's total oil and gas production  during
2000:   Phillips 66 Natural Gas Co. for 32%, Plains Marketing LP  for  14%,
Amoco Production for 13% and Sun Refining and Marketing Co. for 11%.   Four
purchasers  accounted  for  68%  of the Partnership's  total  oil  and  gas
production during 1999:  Phillips 66 Natural Gas Co. for 29%, Sun  Refining
and  Marketing  Co.  for  15%,  Scurlock Permian  LLC  for  12%  and  Amoco
Production  for  12%.    All purchasers of the Partnership's  oil  and  gas
production  are  unrelated  third parties.   In  the  event  any  of  these
purchasers were to discontinue purchasing the Partnership's production, the
Managing General Partner believes that a substitute purchaser or purchasers
could be located without undue delay.  No other purchaser accounted for  an
amount  equal to or greater than 10% of the Partnership's sales of oil  and
gas production.




Competition
Because  the  Partnership has utilized all of its funds available  for  the
acquisition  of interests in producing oil and gas properties,  it  is  not
subject  to  competition from other oil and gas property  purchasers.   See
Item 2, Properties.

Factors  that  may  adversely  affect the  Partnership  include  delays  in
completing  arrangements  for  the sale of production,  availability  of  a
market for production, rising operating costs of producing oil and gas  and
complying  with  applicable  water  and  air  pollution  control  statutes,
increasing  costs  and  difficulties of transportation,  and  marketing  of
competitive  fuels.   Moreover, domestic oil  and  gas  must  compete  with
imported oil and gas and with coal, atomic energy, hydroelectric power  and
other forms of energy.

Regulation

Oil  and Gas Production - The production and sale of oil and gas is subject
to  federal and state governmental regulation in several respects, such  as
existing price controls on natural gas and possible price controls on crude
oil,  regulation of oil and gas production by state and local  governmental
agencies, pollution and environmental controls and various other direct and
indirect   regulations.   Many  jurisdictions  have  periodically   imposed
limitations on oil and gas production by restricting the rate of  flow  for
oil  and  gas wells below their actual capacity to produce and by  imposing
acreage limitations for the drilling of wells.  The federal government  has
the  power  to  permit increases in the amount of oil imported  from  other
countries and to impose pollution control measures.

Various  aspects of the Partnership's oil and gas activities are  regulated
by  administrative agencies under statutory provisions of the states  where
such  activities  are  conducted and by certain  agencies  of  the  federal
government for operations on Federal leases.  Moreover, certain  prices  at
which the Partnership may sell its natural gas production are controlled by
the  Natural Gas Policy Act of 1978, the Natural Gas Wellhead Decontrol Act
of  1989  and the regulations promulgated by the Federal Energy  Regulatory
Commission.

Environmental  - The Partnership's oil and gas activities  are  subject  to
extensive  federal,  state  and local laws and  regulations  governing  the
generation,  storage, handling, emission, transportation and  discharge  of
materials into the environment.  Governmental authorities have the power to
enforce compliance with their regulations, and violations carry substantial
penalties.   This  regulatory burden on the oil and gas industry  increases
its cost of doing business and consequently affects its profitability.  The
Managing  General  Partner  is  unable to  predict  what,  if  any,  effect
compliance will have on the Partnership.

Industry  Regulations  and  Guidelines - Certain industry  regulations  and
guidelines  apply to the registration, qualification and operation  of  oil
and  gas programs in the form of limited partnerships.  The Partnership  is
subject  to  these  guidelines  which regulate  and  restrict  transactions
between  the Managing General Partner and the Partnership.  The Partnership
complies  with these guidelines and the Managing General Partner  does  not
anticipate that continued compliance will have a material adverse effect on
Partnership operations.

Partnership Employees
The Partnership has no employees; however, the Managing General Partner has
a  staff of geologists, engineers, accountants, landmen and clerical  staff
who  engage in Partnership activities and operations and perform additional
services  for  the  Partnership as needed.  In  addition  to  the  Managing
General  Partner's  staff, the Partnership engages independent  consultants
such  as petroleum engineers and geologists as needed.  As of December  31,
2001,  there were 89 individuals directly employed by the Managing  General
Partner in various capacities.


Item 2.   Properties

In  determining whether an interest in a particular producing property  was
to  be  acquired, the Managing General Partner considered such criteria  as
estimated  oil  and  gas reserves, estimated cash flow  from  the  sale  of
production,  present  and  future prices of oil  and  gas,  the  extent  of
undeveloped  and  unproved reserves, the potential for secondary,  tertiary
and other enhanced recovery projects and the availability of markets.

As  of December 31, 2001, the Partnership possessed an interest in oil  and
gas properties located in Cameron Parish of Louisiana; Eddy, Chaves and Lea
Counties  of  New Mexico; Pottawatomie County of Oklahoma; Dawson,  Howard,
Leon,  Pecos,  Stephens, Upton, Ward and Winkler Counties of Texas.   These
properties  consist  of  various interests in approximately  84  wells  and
units.

Due  to  the  Partnership's  objective of  maintaining  current  operations
without engaging in the drilling of any developmental or exploratory wells,
or  additional acquisitions of producing properties, there has not been any
significant changes in properties during 2001, 2000 and 1999.

During  2001, three leases were sold for approximately $60. There  were  no
property sales during 2000 and 1999.

Significant Properties
The  following  table  reflects the significant  properties  in  which  the
Partnership has an interest:

                         Date
                      Purchased        No. of          Proved Reserves*
Name and Location    and Interest      Wells       Oil (bbls)  Gas (mcf)
- -----------------    ------------      -----       ----------  ---------
BHP-Hendricks         10/98 at 10%        5         68,000       19,000
Winkler County,       to 17%
Texas                 working interest

Mobil Acquisition     10/88 at 2%         9          4,000      477,000
Pecos and Upton       to 16%
Counties, Texas       working interest

*Ryder  Scott  Petroleum Engineers prepared the reserve and  present  value
data for the Partnership's existing properties as of January 1, 2002.   The
reserve  estimates were made in accordance with guidelines  established  by
the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission  pursuant  to  Rule  4-10(a)  of
Regulation  S-X.   Such guidelines require oil and gas reserve  reports  be
prepared  under  existing  economic  and  operating  conditions   with   no
provisions   for   price   and  cost  escalation  except   by   contractual
arrangements.

Oil  price  adjustments were made in the individual evaluations to  reflect
oil quality, gathering and transportation costs. The results of the reserve
report as of January 1, 2002 are an average price of $17.13 per barrel.

Gas  price  adjustments were made in the individual evaluations to  reflect
BTU  content,  gathering and transportation costs and  gas  processing  and
shrinkage.  The results of the reserve report as of January 1, 2002 are  an
average price of $2.36 per Mcf.


As  also discussed in Part II, Item 7, Management's Discussion and Analysis
of  Financial Condition and Results of Operations, oil and gas prices  were
subject to frequent changes in 2001.

The  evaluation  of  oil and gas properties is not  an  exact  science  and
inevitably involves a significant degree of uncertainty, particularly  with
respect to the quantity of oil or gas that any given property is capable of
producing.   Estimates  of  oil and gas reserves  are  based  on  available
geological and engineering data, the extent and quality of which  may  vary
in  each  case  and,  in  certain instances, may prove  to  be  inaccurate.
Consequently,  properties may be depleted more rapidly than the  geological
and engineering data have indicated.

Unanticipated  depletion, if it occurs, will result in lower reserves  than
previously  estimated; thus an ultimately lower return for the Partnership.
Basic  changes in past reserve estimates occur annually.  As  new  data  is
gathered  during the subsequent year, the engineer must revise his  earlier
estimates.  A year of new information, which is pertinent to the estimation
of  future  recoverable volumes, is available during  the  subsequent  year
evaluation.   In applying industry standards and procedures, the  new  data
may cause the previous estimates to be revised.  This revision may increase
or  decrease the earlier estimated volumes.  Pertinent information gathered
during the year may include actual production and decline rates, production
from  offset  wells  drilled to the same geologic formation,  increased  or
decreased water production, workovers, and changes in lifting costs,  among
others.   Accordingly,  reserve  estimates are  often  different  from  the
quantities of oil and gas that are ultimately recovered.

The  Partnership  has  reserves which are classified  as  proved  developed
producing, proved developed non-producing and proved undeveloped.   All  of
the  proved reserves are included in the engineering reports which evaluate
the Partnership's present reserves.

Because  the  Partnership  does  not engage  in  drilling  activities,  the
development of proved undeveloped reserves is conducted pursuant to farmout
arrangements with the Managing General Partner or unrelated third  parties.
Generally, the Partnership retains a carried interest such as an overriding
royalty interest under the terms of a farmout, or receives cash.

The  Partnership or the owners of properties in which the Partnership  owns
an  interest  can  engage  in workover projects or  supplementary  recovery
projects, for example, to extract behind the pipe reserves which qualify as
proved developed non-producing reserves.  See Part II, Item 7, Management's
Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations.

Item 3.   Legal Proceedings

There are no material pending legal proceedings to which the Partnership is
a party.

Item 4.   Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders

No  matter  was submitted to a vote of security holders during  the  fourth
quarter of 2001 through the solicitation of proxies or otherwise.



                                 Part II


Item 5.   Market for the Registrant's Common Equity and Related Stockholder
          Matters

Market Information
Limited  partnership interests, or units, in the Partnership were initially
offered and sold for a price of $500.  Limited partner units are not traded
on  any  exchange  and there is no public or organized trading  market  for
them.  The Managing General Partner has become aware of certain limited and
sporadic transfers of units between limited partners and third parties, but
has no verifiable information regarding the prices at which such units have
been  transferred.   Further,  a transferee may  not  become  a  substitute
limited partner without the consent of the Managing General Partner.

After  completion of the Partnership's first full fiscal year of operations
and each year thereafter, the Managing General Partner has offered and will
continue  to  offer  to  purchase each limited partner's  interest  in  the
Partnership,  at a price based on tangible assets of the Partnership,  plus
the  present  value  of  the future net revenues  of  proved  oil  and  gas
properties,  minus liabilities with a risk factor discount of  up  to  one-
third  which  may  be implemented in the sole discretion  of  the  Managing
General  Partner.   However, the Managing General Partner's  obligation  to
purchase  limited partner units is limited to an expenditure of  an  amount
not  in  excess  of  10%  of  the  total limited  partner  units  initially
subscribed  for by limited partners.  In 2001, 1,299 limited partner  units
were  tendered  to  and  purchased by the Managing General  Partner  at  an
average  base  price of $210.69 per unit.  In 2000, 1,373  limited  partner
units were tendered to and purchased by the Managing General Partner at  an
average base price of $80.48 per unit.  In 1999, 122 limited partner  units
were  tendered  to  and  purchased by the Managing General  Partner  at  an
average base price of $36.76 per unit.

Number of Limited Partner Interest Holders
As of December 31, 2001, there were 566 holders of limited partner units in
the Partnership.

Distributions
Pursuant  to Article IV, Section 4.01 of the Partnership's Certificate  and
Agreement  of  Limited Partnership "Net Cash Flow" is  distributed  to  the
partners  on a quarterly basis.  "Net Cash Flow", is defined as  "the  cash
generated  by  the  Partnership's investments  in  producing  oil  and  gas
properties,  less  (i)  General and Administrative  Costs,  (ii)  Operating
Costs,  and  (iii) any reserves necessary to meet current  and  anticipated
needs  of  the  Partnership, as determined in the sole  discretion  of  the
Managing General Partner."


During  2001,  distributions  were made totaling  $425,582,  with  $383,024
distributed  to  the limited partners and $42,558 to the general  partners.
For  the  year ended December 31, 2001, distributions of $25.53 per limited
partner   unit   were  made,  based  upon  15,000  limited  partner   units
outstanding.  During  2000,  quarterly  distributions  were  made  totaling
$435,000, with $391,500 distributed to the limited partners and $43,500  to
the general partners.   For the year ended December 31, 2000, distributions
of  $26.10  per  limited partner unit were made, based upon 15,000  limited
partner  units outstanding.  Distributions for 2000 increased significantly
due to the record high oil and gas prices received during the year.  During
1999,  distributions were made totaling $185,000, with $166,500 distributed
to  the limited partners and $18,500 to the general partners.  For the year
ended  December 31, 1999, distributions of $11.10 per limited partner  unit
were made, based upon 15,000 limited partner units outstanding.

Item 6.   Selected Financial Data

The  following  selected financial data for the years  ended  December  31,
2001,  2000,  1999,  1998 and 1997 should be read in conjunction  with  the
financial statements included in Item 8:

                                    Years ended December 31,
                  -----------------------------------------------------------
                       2001       2000        1999      1998        1997
                       ----       ----        ----      ----        ----
Revenues          $  748,950     935,534    609,707   542,492     959,947

Net income (loss)    255,471     469,763    187,448 (330,630)     192,559

Partners' share
 of net income (loss):

 General partners     25,547      46,976     18,745  (33,063)      19,256

 Limited partners    229,924     422,787    168,703 (297,567)     173,303

Limited partners'
 net income (loss)
 per unit              15.33       28.19      11.25    (19.84)      11.56

Limited partners'
 cash distributions
                   per  unit         25.53      26.10     11.10       12.31
17.46

Total assets      $  525,666     696,110    660,170   658,283   1,189,349


Item 7.   Management's  Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition  and
          Results of Operations

General
The  Partnership was formed to acquire interests in producing oil  and  gas
properties,  to produce and market crude oil and natural gas produced  from
such  properties and to distribute any net proceeds from operations to  the
general  and  limited partners.  Net revenues from producing  oil  and  gas
properties are not reinvested in other revenue producing assets  except  to
the  extent  that  producing facilities and wells  are  reworked  or  where
methods  are employed to improve or enable more efficient recovery  of  oil
and gas reserves.  The economic life of the Partnership thus depends on the
period  over  which the Partnership's oil and gas reserves are economically
recoverable.

Increases   or   decreases   in  Partnership   revenues   and,   therefore,
distributions  to partners will depend primarily on changes in  the  prices
received  for  production,  changes in volumes of  production  sold,  lease
operating  expenses, enhanced recovery projects, offset drilling activities
pursuant  to farmout arrangements and the depletion of wells.  Since  wells
deplete  over  time, production can generally be expected to  decline  from
year to year.

Well  operating costs and general and administrative costs usually decrease
with   production   declines;  however,  these  costs  may   not   decrease
proportionately.   Net  income available for distribution  to  the  limited
partners  has  fluctuated  over  the past few  years  and  is  expected  to
fluctuate in later years based on these factors.

Based  on  current conditions, management anticipates performing  workovers
during 2002 to enhance production.  The partnership may have an increase in
production volumes for the year 2002, otherwise, the partnership will  most
likely  experience  the historical production decline of approximately  10%
per year.

Critical Accounting Policies
Full cost ceiling calculations The Partnership follows the full cost method
of  accounting  for  its  oil and gas properties.   The  full  cost  method
subjects  companies to quarterly calculations of a "ceiling", or limitation
on  the  amount of properties that can be capitalized on the balance sheet.
If  the  Partnership's capitalized costs are in excess  of  the  calculated
ceiling, the excess must be written off as an expense.

The  Partnership's discounted present value of its proved oil  and  natural
gas  reserves  is  a  major  component  of  the  ceiling  calculation,  and
represents  the  component  that requires the  most  subjective  judgments.
Estimates  of  reserves are forecasts based on engineering data,  projected
future  rates  of  production and the timing of future  expenditures.   The
process  of  estimating oil and natural gas reserves  requires  substantial
judgment,  resulting  in  imprecise determinations,  particularly  for  new
discoveries.   Different reserve engineers may make different estimates  of
reserve  quantities  based  on the same data.   The  Partnership's  reserve
estimates are prepared by outside consultants.

The  passage  of  time  provides  more  qualitative  information  regarding
estimates of reserves, and revisions are made to prior estimates to reflect
updated  information.   However,  there  can  be  no  assurance  that  more
significant  revisions  will not be necessary in  the  future.   If  future
significant  revisions  are  necessary  that  reduce  previously  estimated
reserve quantities, it could result in a full cost property writedown.   In
addition to the impact of these estimates of proved reserves on calculation
of  the  ceiling,  estimates  of proved reserves  are  also  a  significant
component of the calculation of DD&A.

While  the quantities of proved reserves require substantial judgment,  the
associated prices of oil and natural gas reserves that are included in  the
discounted  present  value of the reserves do not  require  judgment.   The
ceiling calculation dictates that prices and costs in effect as of the last
day  of  the  period are generally held constant indefinitely. Because  the
ceiling  calculation dictates that prices in effect as of the last  day  of
the  applicable quarter are held constant indefinitely, the resulting value
is  not indicative of the true fair value of the reserves.  Oil and natural
gas  prices have historically been cyclical and, on any particular  day  at
the  end of a quarter, can be either substantially higher or lower than the
Partnership's  long-term price forecast that is a barometer for  true  fair
value.



The  Partnership's policy for depreciation, depletion and  amortization  of
oil  and  gas  properties is computed under the units  of  revenue  method.
Under the units of revenue method, depreciation, depletion and amortization
is  computed  on  the  basis of current gross revenues from  production  in
relation  to future gross revenues, based on current prices, from estimated
production of proved oil and gas reserves.

Results of Operations

A.  General Comparison of the Years Ended December 31, 2001 and 2000

The  following  table  provides certain information  regarding  performance
factors for the years ended December 31, 2001 and 2000:

                                                  Year Ended
                                                 December 31,    Percentage
                                                                  Increase
                                                2001      2000   (Decrease)
                                                ----      ----   ---------
Average price per barrel of oil            $   22.67    28.23    (20%)
Average price per mcf of gas               $    4.00     4.17     (4%)
Oil production in barrels                     19,500   20,900     (7%)
Gas production in mcf                         75,800   81,700     (7%)
Gross oil and gas revenue                  $ 745,318  930,919    (20%)
Net oil and gas revenue                    $ 433,255  612,009    (29%)
Partnership distributions                  $ 425,582  435,000     (2%)
Limited partner distributions              $ 383,024  391,500     (2%)
Per unit distribution to limited partners  $   25.53    26.10     (2%)
Number of limited partner units               15,000   15,000

Revenues

The  Partnership's oil and gas revenues decreased to $745,318 from $930,919
for the years ended December 31, 2001 and 2000, respectively, a decrease of
20%.   The  principal factors affecting the comparison of the  years  ended
December 31, 2001 and 2000 are as follows:

1.  The  average  price  for a barrel of oil received  by  the  Partnership
    decreased  during the year ended December 31, 2001 as compared  to  the
    year ended December 31, 2000 by 20%, or $5.56 per barrel, resulting  in
    a decrease of approximately $108,400 in revenues. Oil sales represented
    59%  of total oil and gas sales during the year ended December 31, 2001
    as compared to 63% during the year ended December 31, 2000.

    The  average  price  for  an  mcf of gas received  by  the  Partnership
    decreased during the same period by 4%, or $.17 per mcf, resulting in a
    decrease of approximately $12,900 in revenues.

    The  total  decrease in revenues due to the change in  prices  received
    from  oil  and  gas production is approximately $121,300.   The  market
    price  for oil and gas has been extremely volatile over the past decade
    and  management expects a certain amount of volatility to  continue  in
    the foreseeable future.


2.   Oil production decreased approximately 1,400 barrels or 7% during  the
   year ended December 31, 2001 as compared to the year ended December  31,
   2000, resulting in a decrease of approximately $39,500 in revenues.

    Gas  production decreased approximately 5,900 mcf or 7% during the same
    period, resulting in a decrease of approximately $24,600 in revenues.

    The  total  decrease  in revenues due to the change  in  production  is
    approximately $64,100.

Costs and Expenses

Total  costs and expenses increased to $493,479 from $465,771 for the years
ended  December 31, 2001 and 2000, respectively, an increase  of  6%.   The
increase is the result of higher depletion expense, partially offset  by  a
decrease in general and administrative expense and lease operating costs.

1.  Lease   operating  costs  and  production  taxes  were  2%  lower,   or
    approximately $6,800 less during the year ended December  31,  2001  as
    compared to the year ended December 31, 2000.

2.  General and administrative costs consist of independent accounting  and
    engineering  fees,  computer services, postage,  and  Managing  General
    Partner  personnel costs.  General and administrative  costs  decreased
    2%, or approximately $2,400 during the year ended December 31, 2001  as
    compared to the year ended December 31, 2000.

3.  Depletion expense increased to $66,000 for the year ended December  31,
    2001  from  $29,000  for the same period in 2000.  This  represents  an
    increase  of 128%.  Depletion is calculated using the units of  revenue
    method  of  amortization based on a percentage of current period  gross
    revenues  to  total future gross oil and gas revenues, as estimated  by
    the Partnership's independent petroleum consultants.

    The  major  factor  to  the increase in depletion expense  between  the
    comparative periods was the decrease in the price of oil and  gas  used
    to determine the Partnership's reserves for January 1, 2002 as compared
    to  2001,  and  the decrease in oil and gas revenues  received  by  the
    Partnership  during  2001 as compared to 2000.  Revisions  of  previous
    estimates  can be attributed to the changes in production  performance,
    oil  and  gas  price and production costs.  The impact of the  revision
    would  have  increased depletion expense approximately  $23,000  as  of
    December 31, 2000.




Results of Operations

B.  General Comparison of the Years Ended December 31, 2000 and 1999

The  following  table  provides certain information  regarding  performance
factors for the years ended December 31, 2000 and 1999:

                                                  Year Ended
                                                 December 31,    Percentage
                                                                  Increase
                                                2000      1999   (Decrease)
                                                ----      ----   ---------
Average price per barrel of oil            $   28.23    16.94      67%
Average price per mcf of gas               $    4.17     2.32      80%
Oil production in barrels                     20,900   23,000     (9%)
Gas production in mcf                         81,700   93,700    (13%)
Gross oil and gas revenue                  $ 930,919  606,979      53%
Net oil and gas revenue                    $ 612,009  350,089      75%
Partnership distributions                  $ 435,000  185,000     135%
Limited partner distributions              $ 391,500  166,500     135%
Per unit distribution to limited partners  $   26.10    11.10     135%
Number of limited partner units               15,000   15,000

Revenues

The  Partnership's oil and gas revenues increased to $930,919 from $606,979
for  the  years ended December 31, 2000 and 1999, respectively, an increase
of  53%.  The principal factors affecting the comparison of the years ended
December 31, 2000 and 1999 are as follows:

1.  The  average  price  for a barrel of oil received  by  the  Partnership
    increased  during the year ended December 31, 2000 as compared  to  the
    year ended December 31, 1999 by 67%, or $11.29 per barrel, resulting in
    an   increase  of  approximately  $236,000  in  revenues.   Oil   sales
    represented  63%  of  total oil and gas sales  during  the  year  ended
    December 31, 2000 as compared to 64% during the year ended December 31,
    1999.

    The  average  price  for  an  mcf of gas received  by  the  Partnership
    increased during the same period by 80%, or $1.85 per mcf, resulting in
    an increase of approximately $151,100 in revenues.

    The  total  increase in revenues due to the change in  prices  received
    from  oil  and  gas production is approximately $387,100.   The  market
    price  for oil and gas has been extremely volatile over the past decade
    and  management expects a certain amount of volatility to  continue  in
    the foreseeable future.


2.   Oil production decreased approximately 2,100 barrels or 9% during  the
   year ended December 31, 2000 as compared to the year ended December  31,
   1999, resulting in a decrease of approximately $35,600 in revenues.

    Gas  production  decreased approximately 12,000 mcf or 13%  during  the
    same  period,  resulting  in  a decrease of  approximately  $27,800  in
    revenues.

    The  total  decrease  in revenues due to the change  in  production  is
    approximately $63,400.

Costs and Expenses

Total  costs and expenses increased to $465,771 from $422,259 for the years
ended  December 31, 2000 and 1999, respectively, an increase of  10%.   The
increase is the result of higher general and administrative expense,  lease
operating costs and partially offset by a decrease in depletion expense.

1.  Lease  operating  costs  and  production  taxes  were  24%  higher,  or
    approximately $62,000 more during the year ended December 31,  2000  as
    compared  to the year ended December 31, 1999.  The increase  in  lease
    operating  costs and production taxes is due in part to an increase  in
    major  repairs  and maintenance and in part to the rise  in  production
    taxes  directly associated with the rise in oil and gas prices received
    during  the  past year.  The rise in oil and gas prices  for  2000  has
    allowed the Partnership to perform these repairs and maintenance in the
    hopes of increasing production, thereby increasing revenues.

2.  General and administrative costs consist of independent accounting  and
    engineering  fees,  computer services, postage,  and  Managing  General
    Partner  personnel costs.  General and administrative  costs  increased
    3%, or approximately $3,500 during the year ended December 31, 2000  as
    compared to the year ended December 31, 1999.

3.  Depletion expense decreased to $29,000 for the year ended December  31,
    2000  from  $51,000  for the same period in 1999.   This  represents  a
    decrease  of 43%.  Depletion is calculated using the units  of  revenue
    method  of  amortization based on a percentage of current period  gross
    revenues  to  total future gross oil and gas revenues, as estimated  by
    the Partnership's independent petroleum consultants.

    The  major  factor  to  the decrease in depletion expense  between  the
    comparative periods was the increase in the price of oil and  gas  used
    to determine the Partnership's reserves for January 1, 2001 as compared
    to  2000.   Another  contributing factor  was  due  to  the  impact  of
    revisions  of  previous estimates on reserves.  Revisions  of  previous
    estimates  can be attributed to the changes in production  performance,
    oil  and  gas  price and production costs.  The impact of the  revision
    would  have  decreased  depletion expense approximately  $2,000  as  of
    December 31, 1999.




C.  Revenue and Distribution Comparison

Partnership net income for the years ended December 31, 2001, 2000 and 1999
was  $255,471, $469,763 and $187,448, respectively.  Excluding the  effects
of depreciation, depletion and amortization, net income for the years ended
December  31,  2001, 2000 and 1999 would have been $321,471,  $498,763  and
$238,448, respectively.  Correspondingly, Partnership distributions for the
years  ended  December 31, 2001, 2000 and 1999 were $425,582, $435,000  and
$185,000, respectively.  These differences are indicative of the changes in
oil and gas prices, production and properties during 2001, 2000 and 1999.

The  sources  for  the  2001 distributions of $425,582  were  oil  and  gas
operations  of  approximately  $411,300 and  the  change  in  oil  and  gas
properties of approximately $(1,400), with the balance from available  cash
on  hand  at  the  beginning  of the period.   The  sources  for  the  2000
distributions  of  $435,000  were oil and gas operations  of  approximately
$450,500  and  the  change  in  oil  and gas  properties  of  approximately
$(7,400),   resulting  in  excess  cash  for  contingencies  or  subsequent
distributions.  The sources for the 1999 distributions of $185,000 were oil
and  gas operations of approximately $156,400, partially offset by a change
in  oil  and gas properties of approximately $4,100, with the balance  from
available cash on hand at the beginning of the period.

Total  distributions during the year ended December 31, 2001 were  $425,582
of  which  $383,024 was distributed to the limited partners and $42,558  to
the general partners.  The per unit distribution to limited partners during
the  same  period was $25.53.  Total distributions during  the  year  ended
December  31, 2000 were $435,000 of which $391,500 was distributed  to  the
limited  partners  and  $43,500  to the general  partners.   The  per  unit
distribution to limited partners during the same period was $26.10.   Total
distributions  during  the year ended December 31, 1999  were  $185,000  of
which  $166,500 was distributed to the limited partners and $18,500 to  the
general partners.  The per unit distribution to limited partners during the
same period was $11.10.

Since  inception of the Partnership, cumulative monthly cash  distributions
of  $10,804,312 have been made to the partners.  As of December  31,  2001,
$9,742,095 or $649.47 per limited partner unit, has been distributed to the
limited partners, representing a 130% return of the capital contributed.


Liquidity and Capital Resources

The  primary source of cash is from operations, the receipt of income  from
interests in oil and gas properties.  The Partnership knows of no  material
change, nor does it anticipate any such change.

Cash flows provided by operating activities were approximately $411,300  in
2001 compared to $450,500 in 2000 and approximately $156,400 in 1999.   The
primary  source  of  the  2001  cash flow  from  operating  activities  was
profitable operations.

Cash  flows used in investing activities were approximately $1,400 in  2001
compared to $7,400 in 2000 and approximately $4,100 in 1999.  The principal
use  of  the 2001 cash flows from investing activities was addition to  oil
and gas properties.

Cash flows used in financing activities were approximately $425,900 in 2001
compared to $433,800 in 2000 and approximately $185,100 in 1999.  The  only
use in financing activities is the distributions to partners.

As  of  December  31,  2001, the Partnership had approximately  $91,300  in
working  capital.   The  Managing  General  Partner  knows  of  no  unusual
contractual commitments and believes the revenue generated from  operations
are adequate to meet the needs of the Partnership.

Liquidity - Managing General Partner

The  Managing General Partner has a highly leveraged capital structure with
$50.0  million and $123.7 million of principal due in August  of  2003  and
October  of  2004, respectively.  The Managing General Partner  will  incur
approximately  $17.6  million in interest payments  in  2002  on  its  debt
obligations. Due to the depressed commodity prices experienced  during  the
last  quarter  of  2001,  the  Managing  General  Partner  is  experiencing
difficulty  in generating sufficient cash flow to meet its obligations  and
sustain its operations.  The Managing General Partner is currently  in  the
process  of  renegotiating the terms of its various  obligations  with  its
creditors  and/or  attempting  to seek new  lenders  or  equity  investors.
Additionally,  the  Managing General Partner would  consider  disposing  of
certain assets in order to meet its obligations.

There  can  be  no  assurance  that  the Managing  General  Partner's  debt
restructuring efforts will be successful or that the lenders will agree  to
a   course   of  action  consistent  with  the  Managing  General  Partners
requirements  in restructuring the obligations.  Even if such agreement  is
reached,  it  may  require approval of additional  lenders,  which  is  not
assured.   Furthermore, there can be no assurance that the sales of  assets
can  be  successfully  accomplished on terms  acceptable  to  the  Managing
General   Partner.   Under  current  circumstances,  the  Managing  General
Partner's  ability to continue as a going concern depends upon its  ability
to  (1)  successfully  restructure  its obligations  or  obtain  additional
financing  as  may  be  required, (2) maintain  compliance  with  all  debt
covenants, (3) generate sufficient cash flow to meet its obligations  on  a
timely  basis, and (4) achieve satisfactory levels of future earnings.   If
the  Managing  General Partner is unsuccessful in its efforts,  it  may  be
unable to meet its obligations making it necessary to undertake such  other
actions  as  may  be  appropriate  to  preserve  asset  values.   Upon  the
occurrence of any event of dissolution by the Managing General Partner, the
holders  of  a  majority of limited partnership interests may,  by  written
agreement,  elect  to  continue the business  of  the  Partnership  in  the
Partnership's   name,  with  Partnership  property,  in   a   reconstituted
partnership under the terms of the partnership agreement and to designate a
successor Managing General Partner.


Recent Accounting Pronouncements

In June 1998, the Financial Accounting Standards Board ("FASB") issued
Statement of Financial Accounting Standards ("SFAS") No.133, "Accounting
for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities."  SFAS No. 133, as
amended by SFAS No. 138, establishes accounting and reporting standards for
derivative instruments, including certain derivative instruments embedded
in other contracts and for hedging activities.  Assessment by the Managing
General Partner revealed this pronouncement to have no impact on the
partnerships.

The FASB has issued Statement No. 143 "Accounting for Asset Retirement
Obligations" which establishes requirements for the accounting of removal-
type costs associated with asset retirements.  The standard is effective
for fiscal years beginning after June 15, 2002, with earlier application
encouraged.  The Managing General Partner is currently assessing the impact
on the partnerships financial statements.

On  October 3, 2001, the FASB issued Statements No. 144 "Accounting for the
Impairment   or   Disposal  of  Long-Lived  Assets."   This   pronouncement
supercedes FAS 121 "Accounting for the Impairment of Long-Lived Assets  and
for  Long-Lived  Assets to Be Disposed" and eliminates the  requirement  of
Statement  121 to allocate goodwill to long-lived assets to be  tested  for
impairment.   The provisions of this statement are effective for  financial
statements issued for fiscal years beginning after December 15,  2001,  and
interim periods within those fiscal years.  The Managing General Partner is
currently assessing the impact to the partnerships financial statements.

Item 7A.  Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk

The  Partnership  is  not a party to any derivative or embedded  derivative
instruments.


Item 8.   Financial Statements and Supplementary Data

                      Index to Financial Statements

                                                                       Page

Independent Auditors Report                                             19

Balance Sheets                                                          20

Statements of Operations                                                21

Statement of Changes in Partners' Equity                                22

Statements of Cash Flows                                                23

Notes to Financial Statements                                           25











                       INDEPENDENT AUDITORS REPORTS

The Partners
Southwest Oil & Gas
 Income Fund VII-A, L.P.
(A Delaware Limited Partnership)

We  have  audited the accompanying balance sheets of Southwest  Oil  &  Gas
Income  Fund  VII-A, L.P. (the "Partnership") as of December 31,  2001  and
2000, and the related statements of operations, changes in partners' equity
and  cash  flows  for  each  of the years in the three  year  period  ended
December  31,  2001.  These financial statements are the responsibility  of
the  Partnership's management.  Our responsibility is to express an opinion
on these financial statements based on our audits.

We  conducted  our  audits in accordance with auditing standards  generally
accepted in the United States of America.  Those standards require that  we
plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the
financial statements are free of material misstatement.  An audit  includes
examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures
in  the  financial  statements.   An  audit  also  includes  assessing  the
accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as
well  as  evaluating  the  overall financial  statement  presentation.   We
believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

In  our opinion, the financial statements referred to above present fairly,
in  all  material respects, the financial position of Southwest Oil  &  Gas
Income Fund VII-A, L.P. as of December 31, 2001 and 2000 and the results of
its  operations and its cash flows for each of the years in the three  year
period  ended  December  31, 2001 in conformity with accounting  principles
generally accepted in the United States of America.








                                                  KPMG LLP



Midland, Texas
March 10, 2002



               Southwest Oil & Gas Income Fund VII-A, L.P.
                     (a Delaware limited partnership)
                              Balance Sheets
                        December 31, 2001 and 2000



2001                                                  2000
                                                      ----          ----
  Assets
  ------

Current assets:
 Cash and cash equivalents                   $        52,669       68,661
 Receivable from Managing General Partner             39,957      129,834

- ---------                                    ---------
                                                 Total    current    assets
92,626                                       198,495

- ---------                                    ---------
Oil and gas properties - using the full-
 cost method of accounting                         4,504,731    4,503,306
  Less accumulated depreciation,
                                               depletion  and  amortization
4,071,691                                    4,005,691

- ---------                                    ---------
                                              Net  oil  and gas  properties
433,040                                      497,615

- ---------                                    ---------
                                                                          $
525,666                                      696,110

=========                                    =========

  Liabilities and Partners' Equity
  --------------------------------

Current liability - distribution payable     $         1,360        1,693

- ---------                                    ---------
Partners' equity:
 General partners                                  (582,024)    (565,013)
 Limited partners                                  1,106,330    1,259,430

- ---------                                    ---------
                                                Total    partners'   equity
524,306                                      694,417

- ---------                                    ---------
                                                                          $
525,666                                      696,110

=========                                    =========























                  The accompanying notes are an integral
                   part of these financial statements.


               Southwest Oil & Gas Income Fund VII-A, L.P.
                     (a Delaware limited partnership)
                         Statements of Operations
               Years ended December 31, 2001, 2000 and 1999



                                                            2001       2000
1999
                                                            ----       ----
- ----
     Revenues
     --------

Oil and gas revenue                       $    745,318   930,919  606,979
Interest income from operations                  3,632     4,615    2,728
                                                                  ---------
- ---------                                 ---------
                                                                    748,950
935,534                                   609,707
                                                                  ---------
- ---------                                 ---------
  Expenses
  --------

Production                                     312,063   318,910  256,890
General and administrative                     115,416   117,861  114,369
Depreciation, depletion and amortization        66,000    29,000   51,000
                                                                  ---------
- ---------                                 ---------
                                                                    493,479
465,771                                   422,259
                                                                  ---------
- ---------                                 ---------
Net income                                $    255,471   469,763  187,448
                                                                  =========
=========                                 =========
Net income allocated to:

 Managing General Partner                 $     22,992    42,278   16,871
                                                                  =========
=========                                 =========
 General Partner                          $      2,555     4,698    1,874
                                                                  =========
=========                                 =========
 Limited partners                         $    229,924   422,787  168,703
                                                                  =========
=========                                 =========
  Per limited partner unit                $      15.33     28.19    11.25
                                                                  =========
=========                                 =========


























                  The accompanying notes are an integral
                   part of these financial statements.


               Southwest Oil & Gas Income Fund VII-A, L.P.
                     (a Delaware limited partnership)
                 Statement of Changes in Partners' Equity
               Years ended December 31, 2001, 2000 and 1999


                                             General    Limited
                                             Partners   Partners   Total
                                             --------   --------   -----
Balance at December 31, 1998            $  (568,734)  1,225,940   657,206

 Net income                                   18,745    168,703   187,448

 Distribution                               (18,500)  (166,500) (185,000)
                                                                   --------
- ----------                              ----------
Balance at December 31, 1999               (568,489)  1,228,143   659,654

 Net income                                   46,976    422,787   469,763

 Distribution                               (43,500)  (391,500) (435,000)
                                                                   --------
- ----------                              ----------
Balance at December 31, 2000               (565,013)  1,259,430   694,417

 Net income                                   25,547    229,924   255,471

 Distribution                               (42,558)  (383,024) (425,582)
                                                                   --------
- ----------                              ----------
Balance at December 31, 2001            $  (582,024)  1,106,330   524,306
                                                                   ========
=========                               =========



































                  The accompanying notes are an integral
                   part of these financial statements.


               Southwest Oil & Gas Income Fund VII-A, L.P.
                     (a Delaware limited partnership)
                         Statements of Cash Flows
               Years ended December 31, 2001, 2000 and 1999



                                                 2001      2000     1999
                                                 ----      ----     ----

Cash flows from operating activities:

 Cash received from oil and gas sales     $    844,497   874,759  536,316
 Cash paid to Managing General Partner
  for production expenses, administrative
                                              fees    and    general    and
administrative overhead                      (436,781) (428,907)(382,627)
 Interest received                               3,632     4,615    2,728
                                                                  ---------
- ---------                                 ---------
   Net  cash provided by operating activities              411,348  450,467
156,417
                                                                  ---------
- ---------                                 ---------
Cash flows from investing activities:

 Additions to oil and gas properties           (6,220)   (7,448)  (4,052)
 Sale of oil and gas properties                  4,795         -        -
                                                                  ---------
- ---------                                 ---------
  Net cash used in investing activities        (1,425)   (7,448)  (4,052)
                                                                  ---------
- ---------                                 ---------
Cash flows used in financing activities:

 Distributions to partners                   (425,915) (433,823)(185,068)
                                                                  ---------
- ---------                                 ---------
Net (decrease) increase in cash and
 cash equivalents                             (15,992)     9,196 (32,703)

 Beginning of year                              68,661    59,465   92,168
                                                                  ---------
- ---------                                 ---------
 End of year                              $     52,669    68,661   59,465
                                                                  =========
=========                                 =========


(continued)
























                  The accompanying notes are an integral
                   part of these financial statements.


               Southwest Oil & Gas Income Fund VII-A, L.P.
                     (a Delaware limited partnership)
                   Statements of Cash Flows, continued
               Years ended December 31, 2001, 2000 and 1999



                                                 2001      2000     1999
                                                 ----      ----     ----

Reconciliation of net income to net
 cash provided by operating activities:

Net income                                $    255,471   469,763  187,448

Adjustments to reconcile net income to
 net cash provided by operating activities:

   Depreciation, depletion and amortization                66,000    29,000
51,000
  Decrease (increase) in receivables            99,179  (56,160) (70,663)
  (Decrease) increase in payables              (9,302)     7,864 (11,368)
                                                                    -------
- -------                                   -------
Net cash provided by operating activities $    411,348   450,467  156,417
                                                                    =======
=======                                   =======








































                  The accompanying notes are an integral
                   part of these financial statements.


               Southwest Oil & Gas Income Fund VII-A, L.P.
                     (a Delaware limited partnership)

                      Notes to Financial Statements

1.   Organization
     Southwest  Oil & Gas Income Fund VII-A, L.P. was organized  under  the
     laws of the state of Delaware on January 30, 1987, for the purpose  of
     acquiring  producing oil and gas properties and to produce and  market
     crude oil and natural gas produced from such properties for a term  of
     50  years, unless terminated at an earlier date as provided for in the
     Partnership  Agreement.   The  Partnership  sells  its  oil  and   gas
     production  to  a  variety of purchasers with the prices  it  receives
     being  dependent  upon the oil and gas economy.  Southwest  Royalties,
     Inc. serves as the Managing General Partner and H. H. Wommack, III, as
     the  individual  general partner.  Effective December  31,  2001,  Mr.
     Wommack  sold  his  general partner interest to the  Managing  General
     Partner. Revenues, costs and expenses are allocated as follows:

                                                     Limited      General
                                                     Partners     Partners
                                                     --------     --------
     Interest income on capital contributions        100%           -
     Oil and gas sales                                90%          10%
     All other revenues                               90%          10%
     Organization and offering costs (1)             100%           -
     Amortization of organization costs              100%           -
     Property acquisition costs                      100%           -
     Gain/loss on property dispositions               90%          10%
     Operating and administrative costs (2)           90%          10%
     Depreciation, depletion and amortization
      of oil and gas properties                       90%          10%
     All other costs                                  90%          10%

          (1)All  organization  costs in excess of 3%  of  initial  capital
          contributions  will be paid by the Managing General  Partner  and
          will  be treated as a capital contribution.  The Partnership paid
          the  Managing  General Partner an amount equal to 3%  of  initial
          capital contributions for such organization costs.

          (2)Administrative costs in any year which exceed  2%  of  capital
          contributions shall be paid by the Managing General  Partner  and
          will be treated as a capital contribution.

2.   Summary of Significant Accounting Policies

     Oil and Gas Properties
     Oil  and  gas properties are accounted for at cost under the full-cost
     method.   Under  this  method, all productive and nonproductive  costs
     incurred   in   connection  with  the  acquisition,  exploration   and
     development of oil and gas reserves are capitalized.  Gain or loss  on
     the   sale  of  oil  and  gas  properties  is  not  recognized  unless
     significant oil and gas reserves are involved.

     The  Partnership's policy for depreciation, depletion and amortization
     of  oil  and  gas  properties is computed under the units  of  revenue
     method.   Under  the units of revenue method, depreciation,  depletion
     and  amortization is computed on the basis of current  gross  revenues
     from production in relation to future gross revenues, based on current
     prices, from estimated production of proved oil and gas reserves.

     Under  the  units  of  revenue method, the  Partnership  computes  the
     provision  by multiplying the total unamortized cost of  oil  and  gas
     properties by an overall rate determined by dividing (a) oil  and  gas
     revenues during the period by (b) the total future gross oil  and  gas
     revenues  as  estimated  by  the Partnership's  independent  petroleum
     consultants.   It  is  reasonably possible  that  those  estimates  of
     anticipated  future  gross revenues, the remaining estimated  economic
     life  of  the product, or both could be changed significantly  in  the
     near  term  due to the potential fluctuation of oil and gas prices  or
     production.   The  depletion estimate would also be affected  by  this
     change.



               Southwest Oil & Gas Income Fund VII-A, L.P.
                     (a Delaware limited partnership)

                      Notes to Financial Statements

2.   Summary of Significant Accounting Policies - continued

     Should the net capitalized costs exceed the estimated present value of
     oil  and  gas reserves, discounted at 10%, such excess costs would  be
     charged  to current expense. As of December 31, 2001, 2000  and  1999,
     the  net capitalized costs did not exceed the estimated present  value
     of oil and gas reserves.

     Estimates and Uncertainties
     The  preparation of financial statements in conformity with  generally
     accepted  accounting principles requires management to make  estimates
     and  assumptions  that  affect  the reported  amounts  of  assets  and
     liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the
     date  of the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenues
     and  expenses during the reporting period. The Partnerships  depletion
     calculation and full-cost ceiling test for oil and gas properties uses
     oil and gas reserves estimates, which are inherently imprecise. Actual
     results could differ from those estimates.

     Syndication Costs
     Syndication  costs  are  accounted for as a reduction  of  partnership
     equity.

     Environmental Costs
     The  Partnership  is  subject to extensive federal,  state  and  local
     environmental laws and regulations.  These laws, which are  constantly
     changing, regulate the discharge of materials into the environment and
     may  require  the Partnership to remove or mitigate the  environmental
     effects of the disposal or release of petroleum or chemical substances
     at   various  sites.   Environmental  expenditures  are  expensed   or
     capitalized  depending on their future economic benefit.  Costs  which
     improve a property as compared with the condition of the property when
     originally  constructed  or acquired and costs  which  prevent  future
     environmental contamination are capitalized.  Expenditures that relate
     to  an  existing condition caused by past operations and that have  no
     future  economic benefits are expensed.  Liabilities for  expenditures
     of  a  non-capital  nature are recorded when environmental  assessment
     and/or  remediation  is  probable, and the  costs  can  be  reasonably
     estimated.

     Gas Balancing
     The  Partnership  utilizes the sales method  of  accounting  for  gas-
     balancing  arrangements.  Under this method the Partnership recognizes
     sales  revenue  on  all  gas  sold.  As  of  December  31,  2001,  the
     Partnership  was under produced by 3,056 mcf of gas.  As  of  December
     31, 2000, the Partnership was under produced by 332 mcf of gas. As  of
     December 31, 1999, the Partnership was over produced by 1,214  mcf  of
     gas.

     Income Taxes
     No  provision  for  income  taxes  is  reflected  in  these  financial
     statements, since the tax effects of the Partnership's income or  loss
     are passed through to the individual partners.

     In   accordance  with  the  requirements  of  Statement  of  Financial
     Accounting  Standards  No. 109, "Accounting  for  Income  Taxes",  the
     Partnership's tax basis in its net oil and gas properties at  December
     31, 2001 and 2000 is $123,205 and $82,531, more than that shown on the
     accompanying  Balance  Sheet  in accordance  with  generally  accepted
     accounting principles.

     Cash and Cash Equivalents
     For purposes of the statement of cash flows, the Partnership considers
     all  highly liquid debt instruments purchased with a maturity of three
     months or less to be cash equivalents.  The Partnership maintains  its
     cash at one financial institution.

     Number of Limited Partner Units
     As  of  December  31, 2001, 2000 and 1999, there were  15,000  limited
     partner units outstanding held by 566, 615 and 679 partners.


               Southwest Oil & Gas Income Fund VII-A, L.P.
                     (a Delaware limited partnership)

                      Notes to Financial Statements

2.   Summary of Significant Accounting Policies - continued

     Concentrations of Credit Risk
     The  Partnership is subject to credit risk through trade  receivables.
     Although  a  substantial portion of its debtors'  ability  to  pay  is
     dependent upon the oil and gas industry, credit risk is minimized  due
     to  a  large customer base.  All partnership revenues are received  by
     the   Managing  General  Partner  and  subsequently  remitted  to  the
     partnership and all expenses are paid by the Managing General  Partner
     and subsequently reimbursed by the partnership.

     Fair Value of Financial Instruments
     The  carrying amount of cash and accounts receivable approximates fair
     value due to the short maturity of these instruments.

     Net Income (loss) per limited partnership unit
     The  net  income (loss) per limited partnership unit is calculated  by
     using the number of outstanding limited partnership units.

     Recent Accounting Pronouncements
     In June 1998, the Financial Accounting Standards Board ("FASB") issued
     Statement   of   Financial  Accounting  Standards   ("SFAS")   No.133,
     "Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities."   SFAS
     No.  133,  as  amended  by  SFAS No. 138, establishes  accounting  and
     reporting  standards  for  derivative instruments,  including  certain
     derivative  instruments embedded in other contracts  and  for  hedging
     activities.  Assessment by the Managing General Partner revealed  this
     pronouncement to have no impact on the partnerships.

     The FASB has issued Statement No. 143 "Accounting for Asset Retirement
     Obligations"  which  establishes requirements for  the  accounting  of
     removal-type costs associated with asset retirements.  The standard is
     effective for fiscal years beginning after June 15, 2002, with earlier
     application  encouraged.  The Managing General  Partner  is  currently
     assessing the impact on the partnerships financial statements.

     On October 3, 2001, the FASB issued Statements No. 144 "Accounting for
     the  Impairment or Disposal of Long-Lived Assets."  This pronouncement
     supercedes FAS 121 "Accounting for the Impairment of Long-Lived Assets
     and   for  Long-Lived  Assets  to  Be  Disposed"  and  eliminates  the
     requirement of Statement 121 to allocate goodwill to long-lived assets
     to  be  tested  for impairment.  The provisions of this statement  are
     effective  for financial statements issued for fiscal years  beginning
     after  December  15,  2001, and interim periods  within  those  fiscal
     years.  The Managing General Partner is currently assessing the impact
     to the partnerships financial statements.

3.   Liquidity - Managing General Partner
     The  Managing General Partner has a highly leveraged capital structure
     with  $50.0 million and $123.7 million of principal due in  August  of
     2003  and October of 2004, respectively.  The Managing General Partner
     will incur approximately $17.6 million in interest payments in 2002 on
     its   debt   obligations.  Due  to  the  depressed  commodity   prices
     experienced  during  the last quarter of 2001,  the  Managing  General
     Partner is experiencing difficulty in generating sufficient cash  flow
     to  meet  its  obligations and sustain its operations.   The  Managing
     General Partner is currently in the process of renegotiating the terms
     of  its  various obligations with its creditors and/or  attempting  to
     seek  new  lenders  or equity investors.  Additionally,  the  Managing
     General Partner would consider disposing of certain assets in order to
     meet its obligations.


               Southwest Oil & Gas Income Fund VII-A, L.P.
                     (a Delaware limited partnership)

                      Notes to Financial Statements

3.   Liquidity - Managing General Partner - continued
     There  can  be  no assurance that the Managing General Partner's  debt
     restructuring  efforts  will be successful or that  the  lenders  will
     agree  to  a  course  of action consistent with the  Managing  General
     Partners requirements in restructuring the obligations.  Even if  such
     agreement  is reached, it may require approval of additional  lenders,
     which is not assured.  Furthermore, there can be no assurance that the
     sales  of  assets can be successfully accomplished on terms acceptable
     to  the  Managing  General Partner.  Under current circumstances,  the
     Managing  General  Partner's ability to continue as  a  going  concern
     depends   upon  its  ability  to  (1)  successfully  restructure   its
     obligations  or  obtain additional financing as may be  required,  (2)
     maintain  compliance with all debt covenants, (3) generate  sufficient
     cash  flow to meet its obligations on a timely basis, and (4)  achieve
     satisfactory  levels  of  future earnings.  If  the  Managing  General
     Partner  is unsuccessful in its efforts, it may be unable to meet  its
     obligations making it necessary to undertake such other actions as may
     be  appropriate to preserve asset values.  Upon the occurrence of  any
     event of dissolution by the Managing General Partner, the holders of a
     majority  of limited partnership interests may, by written  agreement,
     elect to continue the business of the Partnership in the Partnership's
     name,  with Partnership property, in a reconstituted partnership under
     the  terms  of the partnership agreement and to designate a  successor
     Managing General Partner.

4.   Commitments and Contingent Liabilities
     After  completion  of  the Partnership's first  full  fiscal  year  of
     operations and each year thereafter, the Managing General Partner  has
     offered  and will continue to offer to purchase each limited partner's
     interest  in the Partnership, at a price based on tangible  assets  of
     the Partnership, plus the present value of the future net revenues  of
     proved  oil  and gas properties, minus liabilities with a risk  factor
     discount  of  up  to one-third which may be implemented  in  the  sole
     discretion  of  the Managing General Partner.  However,  the  Managing
     General  Partner's  obligation to purchase limited  partner  units  is
     limited  to  an expenditure of an amount not in excess of 10%  of  the
     total  limited  partner  units initially  subscribed  for  by  limited
     partners.

     The  Partnership  is  subject  to various  federal,  state  and  local
     environmental  laws  and  regulations, which establish  standards  and
     requirements  for  protection  of the  environment.   The  Partnership
     cannot  predict the future impact of such standards and  requirements,
     which  are  subject to change and can have retroactive  effectiveness.
     The  Partnership  continues to monitor the status of  these  laws  and
     regulations.

     As  of December 31, 2001, the Partnership has not been fined, cited or
     notified  of any environmental violations and management is not  aware
     of  any  unasserted  violations which would have  a  material  adverse
     effect upon capital expenditures, earnings or the competitive position
     in  the  oil and gas industry.  However, the Managing General  Partner
     does  recognize  by  the very nature of its business,  material  costs
     could be incurred in the near term to bring the Partnership into total
     compliance.   The amount of such future expenditures is  not  reliably
     determinable  due to several factors, including the unknown  magnitude
     of  possible  contaminations, the unknown timing  and  extent  of  the
     corrective  actions  which may be required, the determination  of  the
     Partnership's liability in proportion to other responsible parties and
     the  extent to which such expenditures are recoverable from  insurance
     or indemnifications from prior owners of Partnership's properties.

               Southwest Oil & Gas Income Fund VII-A, L.P.
                     (a Delaware limited partnership)

                      Notes to Financial Statements

5.   Related Party Transactions
     A  significant  portion  of the oil and gas properties  in  which  the
     Partnership  has  an interest are operated by and purchased  from  the
     Managing  General Partner.  As provided for in the operating agreement
     for  each respective oil and gas property in which the Partnership has
     an  interest,  the  operator  is  paid an  amount  for  administrative
     overhead attributable to operating such properties, with such  amounts
     to  Southwest  Royalties,  Inc.  as  operator  approximating  $36,100,
     $34,200  and $33,800 for the years ended December 31, 2001,  2000  and
     1999,  respectively.   In addition, the Managing General  Partner  and
     certain  officers and employees may have an interest in  some  of  the
     properties that the Partnership also participates.

     Certain  subsidiaries  or affiliates of the Managing  General  Partner
     perform  various  oilfield  services  for  properties  in  which   the
     Partnership  owns an interest.  Such services aggregated approximately
     $10,200, $9,100 and $7,400 for the years ended December 31, 2001, 2000
     and 1999, respectively.

     Southwest  Royalties,  Inc., the Managing General  Partner,  was  paid
     $108,000  during  2001,  2000 and 1999, as an administrative  fee  for
     indirect general and administrative overhead expenses.

     Receivables  from  Southwest  Royalties, Inc.,  the  Managing  General
     Partner,  of approximately $40,000 and $129,800 are from oil  and  gas
     production, net of lease operating costs and production taxes,  as  of
     December 31, 2001 and 2000, respectively.

     In addition, a director and officer of the Managing General Partner is
     a  partner  in a law firm, with such firm providing legal services  to
     the  Partnership. There were no legal services provided for  the  year
     ended  December 31, 2001. For the year ended December 31,  2000  there
     were approximately $100, respectively. For the year ended December 31,
     1999 there were approximately $300, respectively.

6.   Major Customers
     No  material portion of the Partnership's business is dependent  on  a
     single  purchaser, or a very few purchasers, where  the  loss  of  one
     would  have  a  material  adverse impact  on  the  Partnership.   Four
     purchasers  accounted for 63% of the Partnership's total oil  and  gas
     production  during  2001:  Duke Energy Field  Services  for  25%,  Sid
     Richardson Energy Services for 14%, Plains Marketing LP for 12% and BP
     Amoco for 12%.  Four purchasers accounted for 70% of the Partnership's
     total oil and gas production during 2000:  Phillips 66 Natural Gas Co.
     for 32%, Plains Marketing LP for 14%, Amoco Production for 13% and Sun
     Refining and Marketing Co. for 11%.  Four purchasers accounted for 68%
     of  the  Partnership's  total  oil and  gas  production  during  1999:
     Phillips  66  Natural Gas Co. for 29%, Sun Refining and Marketing  Co.
     for  15%,  Scurlock Permian LLC for 12% and Amoco Production for  12%.
     All  purchasers  of  the  Partnership's oil  and  gas  production  are
     unrelated third parties.  In the event any of these purchasers were to
     discontinue  purchasing  the Partnership's  production,  the  Managing
     General  Partner  believes that a substitute purchaser  or  purchasers
     could  be  located without undue delay.  No other purchaser  accounted
     for  an amount equal to or greater than 10% of the Partnership's sales
     of oil and gas production.



               Southwest Oil & Gas Income Fund VII-A, L.P.
                     (a Delaware limited partnership)

                      Notes to Financial Statements

7.   Estimated Oil and Gas Reserves (unaudited)
     The  Partnership's  interest in proved oil  and  gas  reserves  is  as
     follows:

                                                                  Oil (bbls)
Gas (mcf)
                                                                  ----------
- ---------
     Proved developed and undeveloped reserves -


     January 1, 1999                                88,000        635,000

       Revisions of previous estimates             113,000        402,000
       Production                                 (23,000)       (94,000)
                                                   -------      ---------
     December 31, 1999                             178,000        943,000

       Revisions of previous estimates              51,000        202,000
       Production                                 (21,000)       (82,000)
                                                   -------      ---------
     December 31, 2000                             208,000      1,063,000

       Revisions of previous estimates            (35,000)      (192,000)
       Production                                 (20,000)       (76,000)
                                                   -------      ---------
     December 31, 2001                             153,000        795,000
                                                   =======      =========

     Proved developed reserves -

     December 31, 1999                             174,000        930,000
                                                   =======      =========
     December 31, 2000                             205,000      1,051,000
                                                   =======      =========
     December 31, 2001                             150,000        784,000
                                                   =======      =========

     All  of  the Partnership's reserves are located within the continental
     United States.



               Southwest Oil & Gas Income Fund VII-A, L.P.
                     (a Delaware limited partnership)

                      Notes to Financial Statements

7.   Estimated Oil & Gas Reserves (unaudited) - continued
     *Ryder  Scott  Petroleum Engineers prepared the  reserve  and  present
     value data for the Partnership's existing properties as of January  1,
     2002.   The  reserve estimates were made in accordance with guidelines
     established by the Securities and Exchange Commission pursuant to Rule
     4-10(a)  of  Regulation  S-X.  Such guidelines  require  oil  and  gas
     reserve  reports  be  prepared under existing economic  and  operating
     conditions with no provisions for price and cost escalation except  by
     contractual arrangements.

     Oil  price  adjustments  were made in the  individual  evaluations  to
     reflect  oil quality, gathering and transportation costs. The  results
     of  the  reserve report as of January 1, 2002 are an average price  of
     $17.13 per barrel.

     Gas  price  adjustments  were made in the  individual  evaluations  to
     reflect  BTU  content,  gathering and  transportation  costs  and  gas
     processing  and shrinkage.  The results of the reserve  report  as  of
     January 1, 2002 are an average price of $2.36 per Mcf.

     The  evaluation of oil and gas properties is not an exact science  and
     inevitably  involves a significant degree of uncertainty, particularly
     with respect to the quantity of oil or gas that any given property  is
     capable of producing.  Estimates of oil and gas reserves are based  on
     available  geological and engineering data, the extent and quality  of
     which may vary in each case and, in certain instances, may prove to be
     inaccurate.   Consequently, properties may be  depleted  more  rapidly
     than the geological and engineering data have indicated.

     Unanticipated  depletion, if it occurs, will result in lower  reserves
     than  previously estimated; thus an ultimately lower  return  for  the
     Partnership.  Basic changes in past reserve estimates occur  annually.
     As  new data is gathered during the subsequent year, the engineer must
     revise  his  earlier estimates.  A year of new information,  which  is
     pertinent  to  the  estimation  of  future  recoverable  volumes,   is
     available during the subsequent year evaluation.  In applying industry
     standards  and  procedures,  the  new  data  may  cause  the  previous
     estimates  to be revised.  This revision may increase or decrease  the
     earlier estimated volumes.  Pertinent information gathered during  the
     year  may include actual production and decline rates, production from
     offset  wells  drilled  to the same geologic formation,  increased  or
     decreased  water production, workovers, and changes in lifting  costs,
     among others.  Accordingly, reserve estimates are often different from
     the quantities of oil and gas that are ultimately recovered.

     The  Partnership has reserves which are classified as proved developed
     producing, proved developed non-producing and proved undeveloped.  All
     of  the proved reserves are included in the engineering reports  which
     evaluate the Partnership's present reserves.

     Because  the  Partnership does not engage in drilling activities,  the
     development  of proved undeveloped reserves is conducted  pursuant  to
     farmout  arrangements with the Managing General Partner  or  unrelated
     third  parties.  Generally, the Partnership retains a carried interest
     such  as  an overriding royalty interest under the terms of a farmout,
     or receives cash.


               Southwest Oil & Gas Income Fund VII-A, L.P.
                     (a Delaware limited partnership)

                      Notes to Financial Statements


7.   Estimated Oil & Gas Reserves (unaudited) - continued
     The  standardized measure of discounted future net cash flows relating
     to  proved oil and gas reserves at December 31, 2001, 2000 and 1999 is
     presented below:

                                                           2001        2000
1999
                                                           ----        ----
- ----

     Future cash inflows                $  4,501,000 15,851,000 6,120,000
     Production and development
                                         costs          2,272,000 5,228,000
2,860,000
                                          ----------  --------- ---------
     Future net cash flows                 2,229,000 10,623,000 3,260,000
     10% annual discount for estimated
                                         timing  of cash flows      905,000
5,160,000                               1,288,000
                                          ----------  --------- ---------
     Standardized measure of
                                         discounted future net cash  flows$
1,324,000                               5,463,0001,972,000
                                          ==========  ========= =========

     The  principal  sources  of  change in  the  standardized  measure  of
     discounted  future  net cash flows for the years  ended  December  31,
     2001, 2000 and 1999 are as follows:

                                                            2001       2000
1999
                                                            ----       ----
- ----

     Sales of oil and gas produced,
      net of production costs           $  (433,000)  (612,000) (350,000)
      Changes  in prices and production costs         (4,395,000) 2,936,000
588,000
     Changes of production rates
      (timing) and others                    454,000  (231,000)    52,000
     Revisions of previous
      quantities estimates                 (311,000)  1,201,000 1,059,000
     Accretion of discount                   546,000    197,000    57,000
     Discounted future net
      cash flows -
       Beginning of year                   5,463,000  1,972,000   566,000
                                          ----------  --------- ---------
       End of year                      $  1,324,000  5,463,000 1,972,000
                                          ==========  ========= =========

               Southwest Oil & Gas Income Fund VII-A, L.P.
                     (a Delaware limited partnership)

                      Notes to Financial Statements

8.  Selected Quarterly Financial Results - (unaudited)

                                                 Quarter
                              ----------------------------------------------
                                 First       Second    Third       Fourth
                                 ------     -------    ------      ------
  2001:
     Total revenues           $  236,047    226,687   170,033     116,183
     Total expenses              113,305    124,409   136,486     119,279
     Net income                  122,742    102,278    33,547     (3,096)
     Net income per limited
      partners unit                 7.36       6.14      2.01       (.18)

  2000:
     Total revenues           $  204,789    243,860   271,517     215,368
     Total expenses              109,657    123,445   131,876     100,793
     Net income                   95,132    120,415   139,641     114,575
     Net income per limited
      partners unit                 5.71       7.22      8.38        6.87


     Future  net cash flows were computed using year-end prices  and  costs
     that  related  to existing proved oil and gas reserves  in  which  the
     Partnership has mineral interests.

Item 9.   Changes  in and Disagreements With Accountants on Accounting  and
          Financial Disclosure

          None

                                 Part III

Item 10.  Directors and Executive Officers of the Registrant

Management of the Partnership is provided by Southwest Royalties, Inc.,  as
Managing  General Partner.  The names, ages, offices, positions and  length
of  service of the directors and executive officers of Southwest Royalties,
Inc. are set forth below.  Each director and executive officer serves for a
term  of  one year.  The present directors of the Managing General  Partner
have served in their capacity since the Company's formation in 1983.

     Name                   Age                       Position
- --------------------        ---         -----------------------------------
- -------
H. H. Wommack, III                      46     Chairman   of   the   Board,
                                        President,
                                        Chief Executive Officer, Treasurer
                                        and Director

H. Allen Corey              45          Secretary and Director

Bill E. Coggin                          47     Vice  President  and   Chief
                                        Financial Officer

J. Steven Person            43          Vice President, Marketing

Paul L. Morris              60          Director

H.  H.  Wommack, III, is Chairman of the Board, President, Chief  Executive
Officer,  Treasurer, principal stockholder and a director of  the  Managing
General  Partner,  and  has  served as its President  since  the  Company's
organization  in August, 1983.  Prior to the formation of the Company,  Mr.
Wommack  was  a  self-employed  independent oil  producer  engaged  in  the
purchase  and sale of royalty and working interests in oil and gas  leases,
and  the drilling of exploratory and developmental oil and gas wells.   Mr.
Wommack  holds  a J.D. degree from the University of Texas  from  which  he
graduated  in  1980, and a B.A. from the University of  North  Carolina  in
1977.

H.  Allen  Corey, a founder of the Managing General Partner, has served  as
the   Managing  General  Partner's  secretary  and  a  director  since  its
inception.   Mr. Corey is President of Trolley Barn Brewery, Inc.,  a  brew
pub restaurant chain based in the Southeast.  Prior to his involvement with
Trolley Barn, Mr. Corey was a partner at the law firm of Miller & Martin in
Chattanooga,  Tennessee.  He is currently of counsel to  the  law  firm  of
Baker,  Donelson,  Bearman  & Caldwell, with the  offices  in  Chattanooga,
Tennessee.  Mr. Corey received a J.D. degree from the Vanderbilt University
Law  School and B.A. degree from the University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill.

Bill  E. Coggin, Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, has been  with
the Managing General Partner since 1985.  Mr. Coggin was Controller for Rod
Ric  Corporation of Midland, Texas, an oil and gas drilling company, during
the latter part of 1984.  He was Controller for C.F. Lawrence & Associates,
Inc., an independent oil and gas operator also of Midland, Texas during the
early  part of 1984.  Mr. Coggin taught public school for four years  prior
to his business experience.  Mr. Coggin received a B.S. in Education and  a
B.B.A. in Accounting from Angelo State University.

Steve  J.  Person,  Vice President, Marketing, assumed his responsibilities
with  the Managing General Partner as National Marketing Director in  1989.
Prior  to joining the Managing General Partner, Mr. Person served  as  Vice
President  of  Marketing  for CRI, Inc., and was  associated  with  Capital
Financial  Group and Dean Witter (1983).  He received a B.B.A. from  Baylor
University in 1982 and an M.B.A. from Houston Baptist University in 1987.

Paul  L.  Morris has served as a Director of Southwest Royalties  Holdings,
Inc.  since August 1998 and Southwest Royalties, Inc. since September 1998.
Mr. Morris is President and CEO of Wagner & Brown, Ltd., one of the largest
independently owned oil and gas companies in the United States.   Prior  to
his  position with Wagner & Brown, Mr. Morris served as President of Banner
Energy  and  in various managerial positions with the Columbia Gas  System,
Inc.



Key Employees

R.  Douglas  Keathley,  Vice President, Operations,  age  46,  assumed  his
responsibilities with the Managing General Partner as a Production Engineer
in  October,  1992.   Prior to joining the Managing  General  Partner,  Mr.
Keathley  was  employed for four (4) years by ARCO Oil  &  Gas  Company  as
senior  drilling  engineer working in all phases of well production  (1988-
1992),  eight  (8)  years by Reading & Bates Petroleum  Company  as  senior
petroleum  engineer responsible for drilling (1980-1988) and two (2)  years
by  Tenneco Oil Company as drilling engineer responsible for all phases  of
drilling   (1978-1980).   Mr.  Keathley  received  his  B.S.  in  Petroleum
Engineering in 1977 from the University of Oklahoma.

Jon  P. Tate, Vice President, Land and Assistant Secretary, age 44, assumed
his  responsibilities with the Managing General Partner in 1989.  Prior  to
joining  the  Managing  General Partner, Mr.  Tate  was  employed  by  C.F.
Lawrence  & Associates, Inc., an independent oil and gas company,  as  Land
Manager from 1981 through 1989.  Mr. Tate is a member of the Permian  Basin
Landman's  Association and American Association of Petroleum Landmen.   Mr.
Tate received his B.B.S. degree from Hardin-Simmons University.

In certain instances, the Managing General Partner will engage professional
petroleum   consultants   and  other  independent  contractors,   including
engineers   and   geologists  in  connection  with  property  acquisitions,
geological  and  geophysical  analysis,  and  reservoir  engineering.   The
Managing  General Partner believes that, in addition to its own  "in-house"
staff,  the utilization of such consultants and independent contractors  in
specific  instances  and  on  an  "as-needed"  basis  allows  for   greater
flexibility  and greater opportunity to perform its oil and gas  activities
more economically and effectively.

Item 11.  Executive Compensation

The  Partnership  does not have any directors or executive  officers.   The
executive officers of the Managing General Partner do not receive any  cash
compensation,  bonuses, deferred compensation or compensation  pursuant  to
any  type  of  plan,  from the Partnership.  The Managing  General  Partner
received  $108,000  during 2001, 2000 and 1999 as an annual  administrative
fee.

Item 12.  Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management

There  are  no  limited partners who own of record, or  are  known  by  the
Managing General Partner to beneficially own, more than five percent of the
Partnership's limited partnership interests.

The   Managing  General  Partner  owns  a  nine  percent  interest  in  the
Partnership as a general partner.  Through repurchase offers to the limited
partners,  the  Managing General Partner also owns 4,688.0 limited  partner
units,  a  31.3% limited partner interest.  The Managing General  Partner's
total percentage interest ownership in the Partnership is 37.1%.

No  officer or director of the Managing General Partner owns Units  in  the
Partnership.  H. H. Wommack, III, as the individual general partner of  the
Partnership, owns a one percent interest as a general partner. The Managing
General  Partner  as  of  December 31, 2001, repurchased  the  one  percent
interest owned by Mr. Wommack for approximately $34,481.  The officers  and
directors of the Managing General Partner are considered beneficial  owners
of  the  limited partner units acquired by the Managing General Partner  by
virtue  of  their status as such.  A list of beneficial owners  of  limited
partner units, acquired by the Managing General Partner, is as follows:


                                                  Amount and
                                                  Nature of       Percent
                     Name and Address of          Beneficial         of
  Title of Class       Beneficial Owner           Ownership        Class
- -------------------  ---------------------------  ---------------  -------
Limited Partnership  Southwest Royalties, Inc.    Directly Owns    31.3%
 Interest            Managing General Partner     4,688.0 Units
                     407 N. Big Spring Street
                     Midland, TX  79701

Limited Partnership  H. H. Wommack, III           Indirectly Owns  31.3%
 Interest            Chairman of the Board,       4,688.0 Units
                     President, CEO, Treasurer
                     and Director of Southwest
                     Royalties, Inc., the
                     Managing General Partner
                     407 N. Big Spring Street
                     Midland, TX  79701

Limited Partnership  H. Allen Corey               Indirectly Owns  31.3%
 Interest            Secretary and Director of    4,688.0 Units
                     Southwest Royalties, Inc.,
                     the Managing General
                     Partner
                     633 Chestnut Street
                     Chattanooga, TN  37450-1800

Limited Partnership  Bill E. Coggin               Indirectly Owns  31.3%
 Interest            Vice President and CFO of    4,688.0 Units
                     Southwest Royalties, Inc.,
                     the Managing General
                     Partner
                     407 N. Big Spring Street
                     Midland, TX  79701

Limited Partnership  J. Steven Person, Marketing  Indirectly Owns  31.3%
 Interest            Southwest Royalties, Inc.,   4,688.0 Units
                     the Managing General
                     Partner
                     407 N. Big Spring Street
                     Midland, TX  79701

Limited Partnership  Paul L. Morris               Indirectly Owns   31.3%
 Interest            Director of Southwest        4,688.0 Units
                     Royalties, Inc., the
                     Managing General Partner
                     407 N. Big Spring Street
                     Midland, TX  79701



There  are no arrangements known to the Managing General Partner which  may
at a subsequent date result in a change of control of the Partnership.

Item 13.  Certain Relationships and Related Transactions

In   2001,   the   Managing  General  Partner  received  $108,000   as   an
administrative  fee.  This amount is part of the general and administrative
expenses incurred by the Partnership.

In  some  instances the Managing General Partner and certain  officers  and
employees  may  be working interest owners in an oil and  gas  property  in
which  the Partnership also has a working interest.  Certain properties  in
which  the Partnership has an interest are operated by the Managing General
Partner,  who  was  paid approximately $36,100 for administrative  overhead
attributable to operating such properties during 2001.

Certain  subsidiaries or affiliates of the Managing General Partner perform
various  oilfield services for properties in which the Partnership owns  an
interest. Such services aggregated approximately $10,200 for the year ended
December 31, 2001.

The law firm of Baker Donelson, Bearman & Caldwell of which H. Allen Corey,
an  officer and director of the Managing General Partner, is a partner,  is
counsel  to  the  Partnership.  There were no legal  services  rendered  by
Baker,  Donelson, Bearman & Caldwell to the Partnership during 2001,  which
constitutes an immaterial portion of that firm's business.

In  the  opinion  of  management, the terms of the above  transactions  are
similar to ones with unaffiliated third parties.


                                 Part IV


Item 14.  Exhibits, Financial Statement Schedules and Reports on Form 8-K

          (a)(1)  Financial Statements:

                  Included in Part II of this report --

                  Independent Auditors Report
                  Balance Sheets
                  Statements of Operations
                  Statement of Changes in Partners' Equity
                  Statements of Cash Flows
                  Notes to Financial Statements

                     (2)  Schedules required by Article 12 of Regulation S-
                  X  are either omitted because they are not applicable  or
                  because  the  required  information  is  shown   in   the
                  financial statements or the notes thereto.

             (3)  Exhibits:

                                      4      (a)   Certificate  of  Limited
                          Partnership  of Southwest Oil & Gas  Income  Fund
                          VII-A,  L.P.,  dated January 28, 1987.   (Incorpo
                          rated  by reference from Partnership's Form  10-K
                          for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1987.)

                                            (b)    Agreement   of   Limited
                          Partnership  of Southwest Oil & Gas  Income  Fund
                          VII-A,  L.P. dated April 28, 1987.  (Incorporated
                          by reference from Partnership's Form 10-K for the
                          fiscal year ended December 31, 1987.)

                                          (c)  Certificate of Amendment  of
                          Limited Partnership of Southwest Oil & Gas Income
                          Fund   VII-A,   L.P.,  dated   July   21,   1987.
                          (Incorporated  by  reference  from  Partnership's
                          Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December  31,
                          1987.)

                  27 Financial Data Schedule

          (b)     Reports on Form 8-K

                      There  were no reports filed on Form 8-K  during  the
               quarter ended December 31, 2001.


                                Signatures


Pursuant  to  the  requirements of Section 13 or 15(d)  of  the  Securities
Exchange  Act  of 1934, the Partnership has duly caused this report  to  be
signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.


                          Southwest Oil & Gas Income Fund VII-A, L.P.,
                          a Delaware limited partnership


                          By:    Southwest Royalties, Inc., Managing
                                   General Partner


                                      By:  /s/ H. H. Wommack, III
                                 -----------------------------
                                           H. H. Wommack, III, President


                          Date:  March 29, 2002


Pursuant  to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934,  this
report  has  been signed below by the following persons on  behalf  of  the
Partnership and in the capacities and on the dates indicated.


By:    /s/ H. H. Wommack, III
       -----------------------------------
       H. H. Wommack, III, Chairman of the
       Board, President, Chief Executive
       Officer, Treasurer and Director


Date:  March 29, 2002


By:    /s/ H. Allen Corey
       -----------------------------
       H. Allen Corey, Secretary and
       Director


Date:  March 29, 2002