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Land Surveyors in Clay County, FL

15 surveyors 6 cities covered Boundary survey $500 to $1,500

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15 surveyors in Clay County
✓ Licensed Professional ★ 4.8 on Google (5)
4371 U.S Highway 17 South, Suite 203, Fleming Island, FL 32003
✓ Licensed Professional ★ 5 on Google (1)
7020 A C Skinner Pkwy Suite 120, Jacksonville, FL 32256
Clay County Surveyor Guide

How to hire a land surveyor in Clay County, FL

Updated for 2026 · 5 min read

How to find a land surveyor in Clay County, Florida

If you need a land surveyor in Clay County Florida, start by matching the survey type to the property and the decision you need to make. Homeowners often need boundary surveys before a fence, pool, addition, or purchase closes. Builders and small developers may need topographic work, construction staking, or platting support. Commercial buyers may need an ALTA/NSPS survey. Once you know the scope, contact firms that regularly work in Clay County and ask whether a Florida Professional Surveyor and Mapper will sign and seal the work. It also helps to choose a surveyor who knows local parcel records, recorded plats, floodplain review, and the development patterns around Fleming Island, Doctors Inlet, Green Cove Springs, Middleburg, Orange Park, Penney Farms, Lake Geneva, and Keystone Heights.

Clay County is covered by multiple local firms in this directory, so you can compare availability, turnaround, and project fit rather than assuming one company handles everything. Use the listing details on /florida/clay/ to build a short list, then ask each firm whether they handle your exact project type and area of the county.

Why local survey experience matters

Local experience matters because Clay County includes suburban neighborhoods, older platted areas, rural tracts, and water influenced parcels that do not research the same way. A surveyor working in Middleburg or Orange Park may spend time very differently than one handling a tract near Keystone Heights or a river oriented parcel near Green Cove Springs.

Recorded plats, parcel maps, and legal boundaries

The Clay County Property Appraiser publishes parcel and GIS data for public use, but the office also states that its GIS information is for general reference and is not a survey or legal document. That is useful for customers because it sets the right expectation: parcel maps help identify land, but they do not replace a signed boundary survey when you are locating corners, building near a line, or resolving a deed question.

Growth areas and development review

Clay County's Planning and Zoning Division administers the county Comprehensive Plan and companion master plans for Branan Field and Lake Asbury. In practical terms, that means some projects involve more than just finding corners. If you are splitting land, adjusting a line, planning access, or preparing for development review, a surveyor with county process experience can coordinate better with planners, engineers, and design teams.

Floodplain and water related review

Clay County maintains official flood and FEMA information through its Planning and Zoning area, and the county notes that FEMA map updates may affect whether some residents are required to carry flood insurance. If your property is near the St. Johns River, Black Creek, Doctors Lake, or other low lying areas, ask early whether you may need flood zone review, finished floor elevation information, or an elevation certificate along with the boundary work.

Common survey projects in Clay County

The most common residential request is a boundary survey for a purchase, fence, pool, driveway, or addition. In neighborhoods around Fleming Island, Orange Park, and Doctors Inlet, owners often want to confirm usable lot area and improvements near side or rear lines before construction begins.

Rural and larger lot work is also common in places such as Middleburg, Lake Geneva, Penney Farms, and Keystone Heights. These projects can involve older descriptions, monument recovery, occupation line conflicts, or acreage questions that take more research than a standard subdivision lot.

For commercial property and small development, local needs often include ALTA/NSPS surveys, topographic surveys, construction staking, and subdivision or replat support. Clay County also offers planning and zoning record searches, which can be useful when a parcel is already tied to development applications or zoning history.

What records and offices matter in Clay County

A good survey starts with record research. In Clay County, surveyors may review recorded deeds and plats through the Clay County Clerk of Court and Comptroller, parcel and map information through the Clay County Property Appraiser, and planning or zoning records where available through Clay County government. The clerk's recording department specifically handles official record recording and plats, which is important when a job depends on subdivision mapping, prior conveyances, or certified copies.

For flood related questions, surveyors may also compare local county floodplain resources with FEMA's official map products. That matters most when a lender, buyer, builder, or permitting team needs a clearer answer on mapped flood risk or elevation certificate needs.

What to have ready before contacting firms

Basic property identifiers

Have the street address, parcel ID, and seller or owner name ready. If you already found the parcel on the property appraiser site, keep that information handy so the firm can confirm the site quickly.

Your documents and timeline

Share the deed, title commitment, prior survey, site plan, closing deadline, and any sketches showing the line or improvement you are concerned about. If you are buying land, say whether this is vacant acreage, a platted lot, waterfront property, or a site that will move into construction soon.

Any county or floodplain context

Tell the firm whether the parcel is already in a county review process, whether zoning or planning records exist, and whether floodplain or elevation questions have come up. This helps the surveyor quote the right scope instead of pricing a narrow boundary job that later turns into additional research.

Licensing and standards in Florida

Florida survey work is regulated under Chapter 472, and the licensed professional for this work is a Professional Surveyor and Mapper. That is the credential to ask about when you hire a land surveyor Clay County Florida property owners can rely on. Parcel maps from tax or GIS systems are helpful reference tools, but boundary opinions, signed surveys, legal descriptions, and elevation certificate work need the appropriate licensed professional involvement.

Because Florida law also addresses elevation certificates within survey practice, it makes sense to raise floodplain questions at the start rather than after the field crew has already been out. That can save time if your site needs more than a basic boundary layout.

Start with the Clay County directory

The fastest next step is to review local options on the Clay County surveyor directory, compare firms by location and stated services, and contact a few with the same project summary. A clear request, plus your parcel ID, timeline, and any prior records, usually leads to a better quote and a faster answer.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I verify a land surveyor in Clay County, Florida?

Ask whether the survey will be signed and sealed by a Florida Professional Surveyor and Mapper, or PSM. Florida survey practice is regulated under Chapter 472, and a qualified firm should be able to confirm license details for the professional responsible for your job.

What should I have ready before I call a survey company?

Have the property address, parcel identification number, closing documents or deed if available, a sketch of the issue you are trying to solve, and any prior survey, title work, site plan, or FEMA flood information you already have.

Which Clay County records help a surveyor get started?

Surveyors often start with the Clay County Clerk's official records and recorded plats, the Clay County Property Appraiser parcel and GIS information, and county planning or zoning records when a parcel is tied to development review.

Do I need an elevation certificate in Clay County?

Not every property needs one, but parcels near rivers, creeks, lakes, or mapped flood zones may. A local surveyor can tell you whether your site likely needs floodplain documentation or an elevation certificate for insurance, permitting, or review.

How long does a survey usually take in Clay County?

Timing depends on parcel size, record complexity, access, and current backlog. A simple residential boundary survey may move faster than a rural tract, waterfront parcel, or commercial site that needs deeper deed, plat, and field research.

Sources

  1. GIS Mapping - Office of the Clay County Property Appraiser
  2. Planning and Zoning | Clay County, FL
  3. Clay County flood/FEMA information - floodplain resources, maps, and risk guidance
  4. U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts: Clay County, Florida
  5. Florida Board of Professional Surveyors and Mappers
  6. Florida Statutes Chapter 472
  7. FEMA Flood Map Service Center
Florida cost guide

See how survey costs vary across Florida by survey type and parcel size.

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Common questions about land surveys in Clay County

How do I verify a land surveyor in Clay County, Florida?+

Ask whether the survey will be signed and sealed by a Florida Professional Surveyor and Mapper, or PSM. Florida survey practice is regulated under Chapter 472, and a qualified firm should be able to confirm license details for the professional responsible for your job.

What should I have ready before I call a survey company?+

Have the property address, parcel identification number, closing documents or deed if available, a sketch of the issue you are trying to solve, and any prior survey, title work, site plan, or FEMA flood information you already have.

Which Clay County records help a surveyor get started?+

Surveyors often start with the Clay County Clerk's official records and recorded plats, the Clay County Property Appraiser parcel and GIS information, and county planning or zoning records when a parcel is tied to development review.

Do I need an elevation certificate in Clay County?+

Not every property needs one, but parcels near rivers, creeks, lakes, or mapped flood zones may. A local surveyor can tell you whether your site likely needs floodplain documentation or an elevation certificate for insurance, permitting, or review.

How long does a survey usually take in Clay County?+

Timing depends on parcel size, record complexity, access, and current backlog. A simple residential boundary survey may move faster than a rural tract, waterfront parcel, or commercial site that needs deeper deed, plat, and field research.