Survey Guide

Find a Land Surveyor in Monmouth County, New Jersey

Updated for 2026 · 4 min read · Find a Surveyor

Key takeaway

Find a licensed land surveyor in Monmouth County, NJ. Serving Red Bank, Freehold, Asbury Park, Long Branch, Howell, Middletown, and Manalapan.

Hiring a Land Surveyor in Monmouth County, NJ

Monmouth County presents some of the most varied surveying conditions in New Jersey. The northern shore has dense beachfront lots, tidal river properties on the Navesink and Shrewsbury, and post-Sandy reconstruction complexity. The inland areas of Freehold, Howell, and Manalapan have active suburban markets with high residential survey volume. Red Bank, as a commercial hub, generates regular ALTA survey demand. Each of these contexts calls for a surveyor with relevant experience, and knowing what to ask helps you find the right one.

Types of Surveys Needed in Monmouth County

Licensed Professional Land Surveyors in New Jersey are authorized under N.J.A.C. 13:40 to perform the full range of survey types. The most common in Monmouth County:

  • Boundary surveys: Establish the legal limits of a parcel and set or confirm corner monuments. High demand across all parts of the county, from inland subdivisions in Howell to shore lots in Spring Lake.
  • Elevation certificates: Document building elevation relative to FEMA's Base Flood Elevation for flood insurance rating. Monmouth County has some of the highest demand for elevation certificates in New Jersey, driven by the shore communities and post-Sandy flood map revisions.
  • ALTA/NSPS surveys: Commercial-grade surveys for real estate transactions. Common along Route 35, Route 9, and in Red Bank's commercial district.
  • Topographic surveys: Map existing ground elevations for grading plans and site development. Required for construction in many shore municipalities where stormwater management is a condition of permit approval.
  • Construction staking: Set layout markers for contractors building in compliance with setback and flood elevation requirements, especially important in the shore municipalities where FEMA freeboard requirements affect foundation height.

Post-Sandy Context

Hurricane Sandy's October 2012 landfall reshaped land surveying in Monmouth County more than any other single event in decades. The storm drove a wave of elevation certificates, LOMA applications, and reconstruction surveys across the shore municipalities. It also prompted FEMA to revise Flood Insurance Rate Maps for many Monmouth County panels, updating Base Flood Elevation values that affected thousands of properties.

A surveyor familiar with post-Sandy conditions in Monmouth County understands which FIRM panels have been revised, how to read current advisory flood maps, and what local municipalities require for elevated reconstruction. This background is valuable when working in Asbury Park, Long Branch, Sea Bright, Highlands, Union Beach, and other communities heavily affected by the storm.

Monmouth County Property Records

The Monmouth County Clerk in Freehold maintains deed records and survey filings for the county. The county GIS portal at co.monmouth.nj.us/gis provides parcel data, tax maps, and aerial imagery that surveyors use as preliminary research tools. Deed research at the clerk's office remains the authoritative source for boundary surveys.

Shore properties in older beachfront communities like Spring Lake and Sea Girt often carry lot histories from the late 19th century when the shore was first developed as a summer resort area. These older plat books are on file at the county clerk and provide the foundational records for boundary surveys in those neighborhoods.

Selecting a Surveyor

When evaluating surveyors for work in Monmouth County, ask specifically about their experience in your community and with your property type. A firm with extensive post-Sandy elevation certificate work on the shore will be better positioned to handle a Long Branch waterfront property than a firm that primarily does inland residential work in Howell.

Key questions to ask any surveyor:

  • Are you licensed as a Professional Land Surveyor in New Jersey?
  • Have you worked in this municipality before?
  • Do you have experience with FEMA flood zone research and LOMA applications?
  • What does your quote include, and what might cause the cost to exceed it?
  • What is your current turnaround time?

Confirm any surveyor's NJ license at njconsumeraffairs.gov before committing.

Browse our directory to find a land surveyor in Monmouth 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 Monmouth County?

Inland residential surveys in Howell, Manalapan, or Marlboro typically take two to three weeks. Shore properties in Asbury Park, Long Branch, or Belmar can take three to six weeks, particularly when flood zone research and post-Sandy map revisions complicate the title research phase.

Can a surveyor help me with post-Sandy flood zone issues in Monmouth County?

Yes. Licensed land surveyors can prepare elevation certificates tied to current FEMA FIRM panels, assist with Letters of Map Amendment (LOMA) applications to challenge flood zone designations, and document building elevations needed for post-storm reconstruction permits.

What is the difference between a survey and a mortgage inspection?

A mortgage inspection (also called a location survey) is a lower-cost document that shows the approximate location of a structure on a lot. It is not a boundary survey and does not establish the legal limits of the parcel with certainty. For definitive boundary confirmation, particularly for shore properties or lots with dispute potential, a full boundary survey by a licensed PLS is required.

Do I need a survey before building a pool or deck in Monmouth County?

Most Monmouth County municipalities require a survey or plot plan as part of the permit application for a new pool or significant deck. Confirming your property line before construction is particularly important in dense shore communities where lot lines can be surprisingly close to proposed structures.