How to Find Someone to Survey Your Property Boundary Correctly

There are different reasons why somebody would need boundary surveying in their property. Often, this type of surveying is done if the owner of the property wants to legally place an item on the property such as a new structure or a fence.

A Licensed Land Surveyor

When hiring a land surveyor, you have to make sure that he is duly licensed by your state. A “licensed” land surveyor means he was able to complete his studies, passed all exams and is certified to perform specific types of land surveys.

Hiring a licensed land surveyor is especially important if there is a dispute over a certain area of a property as the court would be asking for the current boundary survey result as well as testimony from a licensed land surveyor. With this being said, you also have to make sure that the surveyor you’re going to hire can also stand as an expert witness in court.

Looking for a Licensed Land Surveyor

If your property has been surveyed before, it would be easier for you to contact that land surveyor again. This is the best option for several reasons; he already has all information about your property, making it easier for him to perform a new type of survey.

You can typically find your land surveyor’s information on the survey result given to you (if you’ve bought the property from somebody, for instance) or the result given to you by the surveyor himself.

If you don’t have the survey drawing, you can also check the markers put in place by the surveyor during the last survey done on your property. These markers, which looks like iron pegs or pipes, should have the surveyor’s license number/ name on it. You can use this information to find the surveyor online.

If you can’t find the surveyor who worked on your property before, or if the property has never been surveyed, you should easily find a land surveyor in your area (for a land surveyor in the Minneapolis area, click here).

Important Points to Remember when Hiring an ALTA Surveyor

  • As mentioned, make sure that he or she is a licensed land surveyor.
  • He or she should have experience in performing alta boundary surveys. If you’re going to pay somebody, you’d rather have someone who has done it before, right?
  • Look for someone easy to talk to. Communication is very important when hiring a land surveyor. You see, surveying is more of an art than a science – this is why land surveying results vary. It’s important that your surveyor understand why you’re having the survey, what you’re going to use the results for and how soon you’ll be needing the results.
author avatar
Surveyor

More Posts

Surveyor performing a lot survey to verify residential property boundary lines near a construction area
boundary surveying
Surveyor

Lot Survey: The Only Proof That Holds Up in Disputes

When property lines get questioned, opinions don’t solve the problem. Measurements do. Today, more neighbors argue about boundaries than ever before. A fence goes up. A driveway gets widened. A shed appears near the edge. Then suddenly, everyone feels certain — and no one agrees. That’s where a lot survey

Read More »
Basement water damage in a home caused by frozen pipes and ice dams during a deep winter freeze, leading homeowners to request an elevation certificate
flood damage
Surveyor

Why Homeowners Suddenly Need an Elevation Certificate

This week’s deep freeze did more than burst pipes and overload sump pumps. Across Minneapolis, many homeowners fixed their water damage, cleaned their basements, and tried to move on. However, some later received an unexpected message. Their lender or insurance company suddenly asked for an elevation certificate. For many people,

Read More »
Aerial survey drone capturing terrain and boundary data across a large open property
land surveying
Surveyor

What a Wildlife Aerial Survey Reveals About Survey Accuracy

Minnesota recently launched a new wildlife monitoring effort that uses aerial survey technology to track animal movement and habitat conditions across large areas of land. At first glance, this may sound like a project meant only for biologists. However, the tools and methods behind this work say a lot about

Read More »
Aerial view of dense urban commercial properties showing why an ALTA Survey is critical for managing risk in high-value real estate transactions
alta survey
Surveyor

Why an ALTA Survey Is a Risk Tool in Urban Property Deals

Urban real estate deals move fast. Prices are high, competition is tight, and pressure builds quickly once a property goes under contract. Because of that speed, buyers often rely on assumptions. They trust what they see in marketing materials, seller statements, and title documents. However, in dense urban areas, those

Read More »
Diagram showing how a FEMA elevation certificate compares a home’s height to the base flood elevation
flood damage
Surveyor

When a FEMA Elevation Certificate Removes Flood Insurance

If you own a home and your lender says flood insurance is required, you may feel stuck. The good news is that a fema elevation certificate can sometimes change that outcome. In the right situation, this document can show that your home sits higher than the risk level shown on

Read More »
Surveyor verifying site control for an ALTA survey on a commercial construction project
alta survey
Surveyor

GPS Spoofing Can Break an ALTA Survey (Here’s the Fix)

If you plan a commercial closing, you want clean facts, not surprises. That’s why people order an alta survey. It supports a deal with clear, defensible field data. Yet there’s a modern twist most buyers never consider. Many survey crews use GNSS (the satellite signals behind GPS) for parts of

Read More »