What Is Survey Mapping and What Does It Produce?
What Is Survey Mapping?
Survey mapping is the process of measuring land and recording that data into an official document. A licensed surveyor collects field measurements, studies legal records, and produces a map that shows the physical and legal condition of a property.
That map becomes a legal document. It can be used for permits, real estate closings, construction planning, and court filings.
A lot of people confuse survey mapping with aerial photography or GIS. Those tools collect data. Survey mapping turns that data into something legally usable.
What Survey Mapping Actually Produces
This is where most people get lost. Survey mapping doesn’t produce just one thing. It produces different outputs depending on what the project needs.
A Survey Map
The most common output is a drawn map of the property. It shows:
- Boundary lines and property corners
- Lot dimensions and acreage
- Easements and rights-of-way
- Existing structures and improvements
- Utility locations
- Encroachments from or onto neighboring properties
This map gets signed and sealed by a licensed Professional Surveyor. That seal is what makes it legally valid.
A Legal Description
Survey mapping also produces written legal descriptions. These go into deeds, title documents, and recorded plats. They describe the property in precise terms so it can be identified in a court of law.
Without an accurate legal description, a property deed can be challenged.
A Recorded Plat
When land is subdivided or a new development is platted, survey mapping produces a subdivision plat. This gets recorded at the county level and becomes the official legal reference for every lot in that development.
Elevation and Topographic Data
Some survey mapping projects also include elevation data. This is used for grading plans, drainage design, floodplain analysis, and building layout. Engineers pull this data directly into site plans.
How Survey Mapping Differs From Other Mapping Methods
Developers ask this a lot. Here’s a plain comparison.
GIS mapping layers geographic data for analysis. It’s great for planning and visualization. It can’t certify boundaries or produce a legal document.
Aerial mapping captures site data from above using drones or aircraft. It produces terrain models and imagery. It’s fast and covers large areas. But it can’t establish property lines or carry legal weight without a licensed surveyor involved.
Survey mapping is the only process that produces a legally certified output. A licensed surveyor is required by law to sign off on any survey used for legal, permitting, or title purposes.
These tools often work together. Aerial data might feed into a survey mapping project. But they’re not the same thing.
When Developers Need Survey Mapping
Survey mapping isn’t optional on most development projects. Here’s when it’s required or strongly recommended.
Before purchasing land. You need to know exactly what you’re buying. Survey mapping confirms boundaries, flags encroachments, and identifies easements that could restrict what you build.
Before pulling permits. Most municipalities require a certified survey map before issuing building permits. Submitting aerial data or a GIS print without a licensed surveyor seal will get your application rejected.
Before subdividing. Splitting a parcel into multiple lots requires a platted survey map. That plat gets recorded and becomes the legal reference for every future transaction on those lots.
During construction. Construction staking and layout rely on survey mapping data to position buildings, roads, and infrastructure correctly on the site.
Before closing a commercial deal. Title companies and lenders require a current, certified survey map before issuing title insurance on commercial transactions.
What Makes a Survey Map Legally Valid
Three things make a survey map legally valid.
First, it must be prepared or supervised by a licensed Professional Surveyor.
Second, the map must carry the surveyor’s signature and seal.
Third, it must be based on field measurements and a review of all relevant legal records for the property.
A drone image, a GIS export, or a satellite printout does not satisfy these requirements. Only a licensed surveyor can produce a legally binding survey map.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is survey mapping used for?
Survey mapping is used to document property boundaries, produce legal descriptions, support permit applications, guide construction, and satisfy title insurance requirements. It creates a certified record of a property’s physical and legal condition.
How long does survey mapping take?
Most residential survey mapping projects take one to three weeks. Large commercial or multi-parcel projects can take longer depending on the amount of field work and records research required.
Is survey mapping the same as a boundary survey?
A boundary survey is one type of survey mapping. Survey mapping is the broader process. It can produce boundary maps, subdivision plats, topographic maps, and other certified documents depending on what the project needs.
Who can legally perform survey mapping?
Only a licensed Professional Surveyor can sign and seal a survey map for legal use. Unlicensed operators can collect data but cannot certify it for permits, title, or legal filings.
Does survey mapping work for both residential and commercial properties?
Yes. Survey mapping applies to all property types. The scope, cost, and deliverables vary depending on property size, complexity, and what the project requires.
