New Hampshire Survey Guide

Find a Land Surveyor in Hillsborough County, NH

Updated for 2026 · 4 min read · Find a Surveyor

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Find a licensed land surveyor in Hillsborough County, NH. Serving Manchester, Nashua, Bedford, Merrimack, Hudson, and surrounding towns.

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Reviewed May 25, 2026 Sources include Indiana PLA, FEMA, NH Homeland Security and Emergency Manage... Full sources

Surveying Work in Hillsborough County, NH

Hillsborough County runs from the dense urban cores of Manchester and Nashua in the south to the quieter towns of Amherst, Hollis, and Goffstown heading north. That geography creates a wide range of survey needs: suburban lot splits and encroachment resolutions near the Massachusetts border, large-parcel rural surveys farther out, and complex commercial work tied to Manchester's ongoing Millyard redevelopment and downtown construction projects.

With 20 licensed firms in our Hillsborough County surveyor directory, you have real options. Here is what to look for when choosing one.

What Kind of Survey Do You Actually Need?

Before you call anyone, identify what you are trying to accomplish. The most common survey types in Hillsborough County are:

  • Boundary survey: Establishes or confirms the legal limits of a parcel. Required for fence installations, additions, and most lot disputes.
  • Subdivision plat: Divides one parcel into two or more lots. Requires approval from the town planning board and a licensed LLS signature.
  • ALTA/NSPS survey: The commercial standard, required by most lenders on commercial transactions. Common in Manchester, Nashua, and along the Route 3 commercial corridor.
  • Topographic survey: Maps the elevation and physical features of a site. Used for site planning, drainage design, and construction.
  • Elevation certificate: Documents finished-floor elevations for flood insurance purposes. Needed on any property in a FEMA Special Flood Hazard Area.

What the Merrimack River Corridor Means for Your Survey

The Merrimack River runs through Manchester and forms the eastern boundary of several towns heading south. Properties near the river may have riparian rights, easements, or old mill-era deed language that complicates a simple boundary survey. Look for a firm with demonstrated experience in Hillsborough County's title record system, not just a surveyor who is licensed but works primarily in another county.

Manchester: Historic Lots and Active Development

Manchester's Amoskeag Falls area and the Millyard have been in constant development for two decades. Surveyors here deal with old textile-era lot configurations, subsurface easements, and overlapping private and public right-of-way claims. If you are involved in a commercial project in Manchester, ask the surveyor specifically whether they have experience with mill district parcels.

Nashua: Cross-Border Complexity

Nashua borders Massachusetts, and properties in southern Nashua, Hudson, and Hollis sometimes have ownership histories that touch both states' deed registry systems. A surveyor familiar with this cross-border work saves significant time. Ask whether the firm has handled surveys for properties within a few miles of the state line before.

Bedford, Merrimack, and the Suburban Growth Towns

Bedford, Merrimack, and Goffstown have seen consistent residential growth. Most work here is straightforward boundary and lot-line surveys, but the volume keeps local firms busy. Book two to three weeks out during spring and fall real estate seasons.

What to Ask Before Hiring

Get written quotes from at least two firms. Ask each one: Is monumentation included? Will I get a stamped plat? How many years have you worked in this county? A surveyor who knows local title records, town planning board requirements, and county-specific lot configurations will get the job done faster.

Use the directory as a starting point, then confirm the responsible surveyor's current license before hiring. Start there, compare two or three quotes, and confirm that the firm has direct experience with your town's planning office.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What license does a land surveyor need in New Hampshire?

New Hampshire requires a Licensed Land Surveyor (LLS) credential, issued by the Office of Professional Licensure and Certification. Some surveyors also hold the national Professional Land Surveyor (PLS) designation.

How do I know if a surveyor is licensed in New Hampshire?

Use the directory as a starting point, then confirm the responsible surveyor's current license before hiring. through the New Hampshire Office of Professional Licensure and Certification.

What types of surveys are most common in Hillsborough County?

Boundary surveys, subdivision plats, and ALTA surveys are the most common in Hillsborough County. The active residential market in Bedford, Merrimack, and Hudson drives demand for boundary surveys, while Manchester and Nashua commercial projects generate ALTA work.

Can one surveyor handle both a boundary survey and an elevation certificate?

Yes. Many licensed land surveyors in New Hampshire are qualified to perform elevation certificates as part of the same site visit, which can reduce total cost compared to hiring two separate firms.

How many survey firms operate in Hillsborough County?

Our directory lists around 20 firms serving Hillsborough County, ranging from solo practitioners to multi-person offices with crews covering the full county.

Guide transparency

How this guide was prepared

This guide is reviewed against official licensing, public agency, and professional sources where available, with local directory context for Hillsborough County.

May 25, 2026 last reviewed
5 linked sources
0 related profiles
This area currently has several local firm profiles or explicit nearby service coverage.
Readers should confirm scope, license status, timeline, and written pricing directly with the surveyor before booking.