Massachusetts Survey Guide

Find a Land Surveyor in Middlesex County, MA

Updated for 2026 · 4 min read · Find a Surveyor

Key takeaway

Find a licensed land surveyor in Middlesex County, MA. Know which Registry of Deeds covers your town before you start.

The Critical Detail: Middlesex County Has Two Registries of Deeds

Middlesex County is one of only two Massachusetts counties with split registry districts. Before hiring a surveyor, confirm which registry covers your town. The answer affects where your surveyor searches for prior plans, which chain of title they trace, and how quickly they can begin meaningful research.

  • Northern District Registry (Lowell): Covers the northern tier of the county including Lowell, Billerica, Chelmsford, Dracut, Tewksbury, Tyngsborough, Westford, Groton, and surrounding towns. Online at middlesexnorthdeeds.com.
  • Southern District Registry (Cambridge): Covers Cambridge, Somerville, Newton, Waltham, Watertown, Framingham, Natick, Lexington, Concord, Burlington, Woburn, Malden, Medford, and most of the rest of the county. Online at middlesexsouthdeeds.com.

A surveyor should confirm your registry without being asked. If they cannot immediately tell you which district covers your town, that is a signal they may not work this county regularly.

Why Urban Lot Complexity Matters

Cities like Cambridge, Somerville, and Newton have been subdivided, merged, and re-subdivided repeatedly over two centuries. Lot boundaries in these cities rarely follow simple geometric patterns. Colonial-era descriptions reference roads that were renamed, streams that were culverted, and stone bounds that were removed. A surveyor experienced in Middlesex County’s urban core knows how to read and reconcile these descriptions. One unfamiliar with the area may miss conflicts that show up later in title insurance exceptions.

Outer Suburbs vs. Inner Cities

Surveys in Lexington, Concord, Acton, or Stow involve larger lots and more open terrain. These properties are often more straightforward, faster to survey, and less expensive than comparable work in the inner cities. If your project is in an outer suburb, you have more flexibility to hire a surveyor who works across the region rather than specifically in the urban core.

Where to Find Qualified Candidates

Questions to Ask Before Hiring

  1. Which Middlesex registry district covers my property, and how often do you work that registry?
  2. Have you completed surveys in my specific town in the past year?
  3. Do you handle Charles River or Mystic River flood zone surveys?
  4. Can you provide a written scope and fee estimate before work begins?
  5. Will you file the stamped plan with the registry when complete?

Ready to Start?

Browse licensed land surveyors serving Lowell, Cambridge, Newton, Framingham, Woburn, and all Middlesex County towns at our Middlesex County surveyor directory.

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Browse Middlesex County Surveyors

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Frequently Asked Questions

Which Registry of Deeds covers my Middlesex County town?

Middlesex County has two registries. The Northern District in Lowell covers Lowell, Billerica, Chelmsford, Dracut, Dunstable, Groton, Pepperell, Tewksbury, Tyngsborough, and Westford, among others. The Southern District in Cambridge covers Cambridge, Somerville, Newton, Waltham, Watertown, Framingham, Natick, Lexington, Concord, Burlington, Woburn, and most inner and mid-county towns.

Does it matter which registry my surveyor knows?

Yes. Researching the wrong registry wastes time and can miss critical prior plans. A good Middlesex County surveyor will immediately know which district covers your town, confirm the correct index, and find any recorded plans before scheduling fieldwork.

How do I verify a surveyor’s Massachusetts license?

Use the license lookup at mass.gov through the Board of Registration of Professional Engineers and Land Surveyors. Search by name and confirm the PLS license is current and in good standing under MGL Chapter 112.

What is the typical survey turnaround in Middlesex County?

Residential boundary surveys average 3 to 6 weeks. Dense urban lots in Somerville or Newton with complex deed chains can take longer. Commercial ALTA surveys typically run 4 to 8 weeks depending on title commitment availability and Table A items requested by the lender.