What Is a Boundary Survey?
A boundary survey legally establishes the edges of a parcel of land. A licensed Professional Land Surveyor researches the deed, locates existing monuments, measures the property, and sets new corners where needed. The result is a certified plat showing the property's dimensions, corners, and any encroachments or easements.
Boundary surveys are the most commonly ordered type of survey in Alabama and are used for fence installation, property disputes, lot splits, construction setback verification, and satisfying lender requirements in some transactions.
Boundary Survey Costs in Alabama
In Alabama, a residential boundary survey typically costs $400 to $900. That range covers standard city and suburban lots under half an acre with clear deed descriptions. Factors that push costs higher include:
- Large acreage or irregular lot shapes
- Dense vegetation requiring clearing to reach corners
- Steep terrain in northern Alabama's Appalachian foothills
- Old deeds with vague or conflicting descriptions
- Multiple adjoining deed conflicts requiring research
- Corners that have been destroyed or disturbed and require research to re-establish
Rural tracts and large parcels commonly run $1,000 to $3,000 or more, since the field time and research increase substantially with acreage.
Cost by Property Type
| Property Type | Typical Cost |
|---|---|
| Urban/suburban lot (under 0.5 acre) | $400 to $700 |
| Suburban lot (0.5 to 2 acres) | $600 to $1,000 |
| Rural tract (2 to 10 acres) | $900 to $2,000 |
| Rural tract (10+ acres) | $1,500 to $4,000+ |
| Disputed boundary (litigation support) | $2,000 to $10,000+ |
Alabama Terrain and Its Effect on Survey Cost
Alabama's geography divides into three broad regions, each with different survey conditions.
Northern Alabama covers the Tennessee Valley and the Appalachian foothills. Morgan County (Decatur), Madison County (Huntsville), and Lauderdale County (Florence) sit in the Tennessee Valley, where relatively flat terrain and good road access keep field time manageable. Further east, the ridge-and-valley landscape of northeast Alabama near Etowah County (Gadsden) adds time and cost due to slope and vegetation.
Central Alabama stretches from the Red Hills in the north through the Black Belt prairie to the Piedmont plateau. Jefferson County (Birmingham) and Tuscaloosa County have a mix of urban lots and hilly suburban terrain. The Black Belt prairie of Montgomery and Wilcox counties tends to be flatter but often has old deed descriptions tied to historic plantation surveys that require careful research.
Southern Alabama is dominated by the Coastal Plain, which is flat but heavily forested and, near Mobile Bay, includes tidal and wetland areas that require additional care. Mobile County surveys often involve flood zone analysis in addition to boundary work.
What the Survey Process Looks Like in Alabama
After you hire a surveyor, the process typically follows these steps:
- Title research: The surveyor or their staff visits the county probate office to pull your deed, adjoining deeds, and any recorded plats. Alabama records plats with the county probate judge, unlike states that use a separate register of deeds.
- Field work: A crew locates existing monuments, measures the property, and sets new iron pins at corners where they are missing or disturbed.
- Drafting: The surveyor prepares a certified plat showing boundaries, dimensions, bearings, and any encroachments or easements found.
- Delivery: You receive a digital and/or paper copy of the survey. The surveyor retains the original records.
When You Need a Boundary Survey in Alabama
The most common situations that call for a boundary survey in Alabama are: a neighbor dispute over where the property line sits, planning a fence and wanting to confirm you are not encroaching, splitting a lot into two or more parcels, satisfying a lender or title company for a real estate closing, and establishing setbacks before placing a structure.
If your lender only requires a mortgage inspection, that is a lighter product that confirms improvements are on the lot without legally establishing corners. Ask your lender which type they need before ordering.
Find a Boundary Surveyor in Alabama
Our Alabama land surveyor directory lists licensed surveyors by county, sourced directly from ALBPELS records. Search your county to find firms that serve your area and contact them for quotes.