New Jersey Survey Guide

Boundary Survey Cost in New Jersey: $800-$3,500 (2026)

Updated for 2026 · 7 min read · Survey Costs

Quick answer

Boundary survey costs in New Jersey run $800 to $3,500 for most residential lots. See what drives prices up in dense NJ counties and shore properties.

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How this guide was prepared

This guide is reviewed against official licensing, public agency, and professional sources where available.

May 20, 2026 last reviewed
3 linked sources
Guide pages are refreshed when source material, pricing context, or directory coverage changes.
Readers should confirm scope, license status, timeline, and written pricing directly with the surveyor before booking.

What a Boundary Survey Costs in New Jersey

A boundary survey in New Jersey runs $800 to $3,500 for most residential parcels. The range is wide because New Jersey has some of the most varied property conditions in the country: dense urban lots in the northeast corridor, sprawling suburban subdivisions in central counties, shore properties in FEMA flood zones, and large rural tracts in the Pinelands and Highlands.

Understanding what drives cost helps you plan your budget and ask the right questions when getting quotes.

What a Boundary Survey Does

A boundary survey locates the legal corners of your property as described in your deed, compares those to physical evidence on the ground, and produces a stamped plat map showing the result. The surveyor researches county deed records, recorded subdivision plats, and tax maps before doing any field work. In the field, the surveyor looks for existing monuments (iron pins, concrete posts, or other markers), measures distances and angles, and sets new monuments where existing ones are missing or disturbed.

The finished plat is signed and sealed by the licensed surveyor. In New Jersey, only a person licensed by the State Board of Professional Engineers and Land Surveyors under N.J.S.A. 45:8-27 can produce a legally binding survey plat.

New Jersey Cost Factors

Lot size and shape. Larger lots take more time to measure. Irregular or flag-shaped lots in older subdivisions take more time than simple rectangles. Many lots in older New Jersey cities have non-standard shapes from 19th-century plats, which increases field and office time.

Urban density in the northeast corridor. Essex County (Newark), Hudson County (Jersey City, Hoboken), Passaic County (Paterson), and Union County have densely packed residential lots with a high rate of encroachments, shared driveways, and disputed fences. The complexity of existing conditions adds field time. Hourly rates for surveyors in this part of New Jersey also reflect the region's higher cost of living.

Complex subdivisions in central New Jersey. Middlesex, Monmouth, Somerset, and Ocean counties saw massive suburban development from the 1950s through the 1980s. Many of those subdivisions have been re-subdivided multiple times, with recorded plats that do not always match physical conditions on the ground. Reconciling the record with the field takes time.

Shore properties. Beachfront, bay front, and near-shore properties in Ocean, Atlantic, Monmouth, and Cape May counties often have tidal boundary issues, bulkhead lines, and FEMA map concerns that add scope to a boundary survey. Post-Hurricane Sandy, many shore properties were re-platted or had their legal descriptions modified. Surveyors familiar with coastal New Jersey charge accordingly.

Pinelands parcels. Large tracts in Burlington, Ocean, Atlantic, Cumberland, Camden, and Cape May counties that fall within the Pinelands area often have original descriptions from colonial-era land grants, making research and field work more time-consuming than a standard suburban lot.

Prior survey availability. If your lot was surveyed by a licensed surveyor within the last decade and the monuments are intact, a new surveyor can use that prior work as a starting point. If no prior survey exists or the monuments have been disturbed, the surveyor starts from scratch. Ask whether the surveyor will research prior work before quoting.

Monument placement. Some quotes include placement of new iron pin monuments; others charge separately. Confirm this before signing any agreement.

Typical Prices by County Type

While every parcel is different, here is a general picture of where New Jersey counties tend to fall on the cost spectrum.

Dense urban counties (Essex, Hudson, Passaic, Union) tend to sit at the higher end, $1,500 to $3,500 for a standard residential lot. Research complexity and field conditions both push the price up.

Suburban counties (Middlesex, Monmouth, Somerset, Morris, Bergen) typically run $1,000 to $2,500 for a quarter-acre to half-acre lot. Shore properties in Monmouth and Ocean often add $300 to $700 to account for flood zone and coastal complexity.

Southern counties (Camden, Burlington, Gloucester, Salem, Cumberland) tend to be on the lower end for standard lots, $800 to $1,800, though large Pinelands parcels can exceed $3,000 due to research time.

What You Get at the End

A completed boundary survey delivers a stamped plat map showing your lot boundaries, the location of any monuments found or set, and a legal description of the parcel. This document can be recorded in the county deed office, used in a boundary dispute, submitted as part of a permit application, or provided to a title company. The surveyor's seal means a licensed professional has certified the work under state law.

For most homeowners, this plat is the definitive answer to “where exactly is my property line?” No app, county GIS map, or mortgage inspection can substitute for it when real money or legal disputes are on the line.

When a Boundary Survey Makes Sense

Common situations that warrant a boundary survey in New Jersey: building a fence or addition within setback distance of a property line; discovering a neighbor's fence, shed, or driveway may be on your land; buying a property where the deed description seems ambiguous or the lot has an unusual shape; clearing a title issue before sale; or applying for a building permit where the municipality requires proof of setback compliance.

For anything related to flood insurance, elevation, or FEMA flood zones, you need an elevation certificate rather than a boundary survey, though some surveyors do both on the same visit for a bundled price.

How Do I Get Quotes?

Every surveyor in our directory is sourced directly from the New Jersey State Board of Professional Engineers and Land Surveyors registry. Browse by county to find licensed surveyors with local experience.

When requesting quotes, give each surveyor the same information: your full property address, county, lot and block number, the purpose of the survey, and any known issues such as disputed fences or encroachments. Getting three quotes is standard practice.

Ready to find someone licensed and local? Use this directory to find a land surveyor in New Jersey near you.

What Do Land Surveys Cost in New Jersey by County?

Typical residential boundary survey ranges in the most active counties of New Jersey, with the number of licensed firms in each. Click any county to see the full surveyor list.

County Surveyors Boundary survey range
Ocean County31$800 to $2,500
Passaic County23$800 to $2,500
Essex County21$800 to $2,500
Middlesex County16$800 to $2,500
Camden County11$700 to $2,000
Monmouth County11$700 to $2,000
Warren County10$700 to $2,000
Cumberland County7$700 to $2,000

Estimates assume standard platted residential lots. Rural acreage, ALTA/NSPS, and elevation certificates are quoted separately.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What does a boundary survey include in New Jersey?

A boundary survey in New Jersey includes a title search of deeds and recorded plats, field measurements of your lot, recovery or placement of corner monuments (typically iron pins or concrete monuments), and a stamped plat map prepared by a licensed professional land surveyor. The plat can be recorded with the county and used as evidence in legal proceedings.

How long does a boundary survey take in New Jersey?

Most residential boundary surveys in New Jersey take one to three weeks from the time you book through final delivery of the stamped plat. Counties with older records, such as Essex or Camden, can add research time. During peak spring and summer seasons, some surveyors in Ocean and Monmouth counties are booked out four to six weeks.

Can a boundary survey resolve a neighbor dispute in New Jersey?

A boundary survey establishes the legal location of your property lines based on your deed and public records. If a neighbor disputes the result, they can hire their own surveyor. When two surveys disagree, the matter often goes to a licensed surveyor hired by both parties or, ultimately, to court. Having a licensed surveyor's stamped plat gives you the strongest legal standing.

Is a boundary survey the same as a mortgage inspection in New Jersey?

No. A mortgage inspection report shows the approximate location of structures relative to lot lines but is not a legally binding survey. It does not place or verify physical corner monuments and cannot be used to resolve boundary disputes. A boundary survey by a licensed professional land surveyor is the only instrument that establishes legally defensible property lines.