Why You SHOULD Have a Land Survey Completed Before Purchasing Land?

Buying land, whether commercial or residential, is always an expensive endeavor, even if prices have eased somewhat lately. This is why finding a piece of land that you like and making an offer for it without conducting a land survey on the area is possibly the biggest mistake that you can make.

Here’s why it’s very important that you have land surveying done first:

Land surveyors can determine if you’re actually getting what you’re going to pay for. This means find out whether the sidewalks, trees, driveways and even the bird bath is part of the property you’re about to buy. Land surveying would also determine whether the neighbors are encroaching into the property, which would then mean you’re going to have problems in the future with your neighbors.

Land SurveyHiring a lamand surveyor doesn’t only mean they determine what you’re getting or not getting – land surveyors are the experts, and they can help with building regulations, wetland regulations, etc. Take note that these regulations can change anytime, but land surveyors should be updated on these regulations, or they will refer you to someone who is.

What if the current landowner (the one selling the land) can provide you with old land survey documents? You should still hire your own land surveyor to see if the boundary monuments are still in place. Also, land surveying done a few years back may not show recent changes to the land. If the existing survey is older than about ten years, you should get a whole new survey. Technology and surveying standards are both a lot better now and should provide you more confidence in the survey work.

Second, that survey was completed for that owner. He may have instructed the surveyor not to show certain things on the drawing. At least have a land surveyor go out and review the parcel with this survey in hand. We have seen numerous cases where a new land survey would save the buyer thousands so don’t become a victim.

I’ve heard a lot of people say hiring a land surveyor is nothing but unnecessary expense. I’ll tell you what’s unnecessary: the stress caused by paying thousands of dollars for something and ending up not getting what you were expecting. If you are smart, you’d hire a certified land surveyor before making any land purchases.

More Posts

How a Boundary Survey Can Decide a Land Dispute

Recently, San Diego made headlines after city officials filed a lawsuit against federal agencies over fencing placed near the border. The city claims the fencing crossed onto land it owns. Federal officials argue their work stayed within their authority. While the legal battle continues, one thing stands clear: this conflict

Read More »
Aerial survey view of hillside homes showing soil erosion and slope movement after heavy storm damage
land surveying
Surveyor

Why Aerial Survey Demand Surges After Storm Damage

San Diego just went through another round of heavy rain, flood alerts, and coastal erosion warnings. For a few days, everyone talked about road closures and damaged neighborhoods. Then the skies cleared. Life moved on. However, the land does not reset that quickly. After major storms, the ground continues to

Read More »
Comparison between an online parcel map and a professional property survey drawing showing boundary differences
boundary surveying
Surveyor

Why Your Property Survey Doesn’t Match Online Maps

Many people look at online maps and assume the boundary lines they see must be correct. After all, the image looks detailed. The parcel lines appear sharp. The corners seem exact. So when a property survey shows a slightly different boundary, confusion starts right away. However, this situation happens more

Read More »
Modern infill homes built close together where boundary line surveys help clarify property limits
boundary surveying
Surveyor

Why Boundary Line Surveys Are Suddenly in the Spotlight Now

If you follow local news or neighborhood forums in San Diego, you may have noticed a pattern. More stories now involve property lines, permit disputes, and stalled projects. While the details change, the root problem often stays the same. People assumed they knew where their land ended, but the city,

Read More »
Survey stake placed during a construction staking survey to mark accurate building layout before work begins
land surveying
Surveyor

How a Construction Staking Survey Stops Costly Re-Work

Construction mistakes rarely start with bad intentions. Most begin with small layout assumptions that snowball into expensive re-work once construction is already underway. In San Diego, where inspections are strict and build sites are often tight, those mistakes move fast and cost even faster. That is exactly why a construction

Read More »
Land surveyor measuring property elevation for a FEMA Elevation Certificate review
flood damage
Surveyor

Why FEMA Declarations Drive FEMA Elevation Certificate

When FEMA announces a disaster declaration, most people think about emergency help and cleanup. However, for property owners, the effects often go much further. A recent FEMA disaster declaration has quietly changed how flood risk is reviewed across the area. Because of this, more homeowners, buyers, and lenders now ask

Read More »