Survey Guide

Find a Land Surveyor in Middlesex County, New Jersey

Updated for 2026 · 4 min read · Find a Surveyor

Key takeaway

Find a licensed land surveyor in Middlesex County, NJ. Serving Edison, New Brunswick, Woodbridge, Perth Amboy, South Brunswick, and Piscataway.

Hiring a Land Surveyor in Middlesex County, NJ

Middlesex County sits at the center of New Jersey's development corridor, running from Raritan Bay in the east through the Raritan River valley to the suburban townships of South Brunswick and Old Bridge in the south. The county includes two major urban centers in New Brunswick and Perth Amboy, the dense suburban market of Edison, and significant commercial activity along Routes 1 and 9. That diversity of property types creates a broad range of surveying needs, from simple residential boundary surveys to complex commercial ALTA work near Rutgers University and the Route 1 corridor.

Types of Surveys Common in Middlesex County

Licensed land surveyors in Middlesex County perform the full range of survey types under N.J.A.C. 13:40:

  • Boundary surveys: Establish the legal limits of a parcel, place corner monuments, and produce a certified map. These are the most common survey type for residential property owners across Edison, East Brunswick, and South Brunswick.
  • ALTA/NSPS surveys: The commercial-grade survey required by most lenders and title companies for commercial real estate transactions. Standard along the Route 1 corridor in Woodbridge and Edison, and for development projects near Rutgers in New Brunswick and Piscataway.
  • Elevation certificates: Document building elevation relative to FEMA's Base Flood Elevation. Routinely needed for properties near the Raritan River in New Brunswick and Sayreville, and along Raritan Bay in Perth Amboy and Old Bridge.
  • Topographic surveys: Map existing ground elevations and features. Required for grading plans, drainage design, and site development across the county's growing suburbs.
  • Subdivision plats: Required whenever a property owner divides land into two or more lots. Must be prepared by a licensed surveyor and approved by the local planning board before recording.
  • Construction staking: Sets layout markers on the ground for contractors building new structures, roads, or utilities.

Understanding Middlesex County Property Records

The Middlesex County Clerk maintains deed records, plat books, and survey filings that form the foundation for every boundary survey in the county. Before any fieldwork begins, a surveyor researches your parcel's recorded history at the clerk's office and cross-references the county's tax map system. The county GIS portal provides parcel data as a starting point, but deed and plat research at the clerk's office remains the authoritative source.

For properties in New Brunswick and Perth Amboy, title research can be extensive. New Brunswick was settled in the early 1700s and many properties carry layered ownership histories. Perth Amboy has significant industrial history along the Raritan River that can affect parcel boundaries and access easements.

Selecting a Surveyor

Look for a firm with demonstrated experience in the property type and municipality where your parcel sits. A surveyor with a strong residential practice in Edison may not be the best fit for a commercial ALTA survey on a Route 1 site. Similarly, a firm that specializes in older urban parcels in New Brunswick will have deeper familiarity with the county's historic plat books.

Confirm that any surveyor holds an active New Jersey Professional Land Surveyor license before signing a contract. Verify license status at njconsumeraffairs.gov. Ask for a written scope of work and a written quote before work begins, and confirm what happens if the actual research time exceeds the surveyor's initial estimate.

What to Have Ready When You Call

Surveyors price work more accurately when you provide your property address, the Middlesex County tax map block and lot number, approximate lot size, and a clear description of your purpose. If you have a copy of your deed or any prior survey, share those documents. Existing records can reduce research time and lower the overall cost.

Browse our directory to find a land surveyor in Middlesex County serving your area.

Find a Surveyor

Browse the Directory

Find licensed land surveyors near you. Search by state, county, and specialty.

Browse the Directory →

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does a survey take in Middlesex County?

Most residential boundary surveys in Middlesex County take two to four weeks from hiring to a completed, certified map. Commercial or ALTA surveys for properties along the Route 1 corridor or near Rutgers University can take four to eight weeks, depending on the complexity of the title research and the surveyor's workload.

Can a land surveyor help me resolve a boundary dispute with my neighbor?

Yes. A licensed land surveyor can prepare a certified boundary survey that establishes the legal location of your property lines. That document is accepted by New Jersey courts and can resolve disputes over fences, encroachments, or access issues without litigation in many cases.

What records does a Middlesex County surveyor research before fieldwork?

Surveyors typically research deed records and plat books at the Middlesex County Clerk, tax map data, prior survey records, and any easements or restrictions on file. For commercial properties, they may also review utility records and municipal road right-of-way files.

Do I need a survey before selling my home in Middlesex County?

New Jersey does not require a survey for a residential home sale, but lenders and title companies often request one. Buyers in the Middlesex County market frequently request surveys on older properties in New Brunswick, Perth Amboy, or Woodbridge where boundary uncertainty is higher.