Finding a Surveyor in Clarksville and Montgomery County
Montgomery County, Tennessee is one of the more active survey markets in the state, driven by sustained real estate demand from the Fort Campbell military community and Clarksville's steady population growth. The city has grown from around 100,000 residents in the early 2000s to well over 170,000 today, and that growth has kept demand for licensed land surveyors consistently high.
Finding the right surveyor in this market means more than picking the lowest price. It means finding a firm that can deliver your survey on time, understands Montgomery County's land records, and can handle the specific service type your project requires.
Survey Services in the Clarksville Area
Montgomery County surveyors offer the full range of professional survey services. The most commonly needed services in this market include:
- Boundary surveys: Establish legal property lines and set physical monuments at corners. Required for many building projects, fence installations, and real estate transactions where boundary questions exist.
- Mortgage location surveys: Show the approximate relationship between improvements and lot lines. Faster and less expensive than a full boundary survey but not legally binding for corner placement.
- Elevation certificates: Document building elevation relative to the FEMA Base Flood Elevation. Required for flood insurance on properties in Special Flood Hazard Areas near the Cumberland River or Red River.
- Topographic surveys: Map terrain and elevation across a property. Required before engineering or architectural design work on most construction projects.
- ALTA/NSPS surveys: High-standard surveys for commercial transactions meeting national standards set by the American Land Title Association.
- Construction staking: Set field stakes to guide construction of buildings, utilities, roads, and other site improvements.
The Military Market and Surveying Demand
Fort Campbell sits directly on the Tennessee-Kentucky state line, with its main cantonment area in Kentucky but with the majority of its off-post housing, retail, and commercial activity in Clarksville. The 101st Airborne Division alone has several thousand soldiers, and the total military and dependent population associated with Fort Campbell is enormous.
Military families receive PCS orders with 30 to 90 days of notice and need to move quickly. That creates a real estate market where transactions happen fast and where survey services need to be responsive. Firms that serve the Clarksville market well understand this pace and have processes in place to handle residential surveys efficiently without sacrificing accuracy.
What to Look for When Hiring
Start with license verification. Every land surveyor working in Montgomery County must hold a current Tennessee Professional Land Surveyor license through the Tennessee State Board of Examiners for Land Surveyors. The online lookup is free and takes about a minute.
Beyond the license, ask these questions before hiring:
- Have you recently completed surveys in the specific neighborhood or area where my property is located?
- What is your current estimated turnaround time for a residential boundary survey?
- What does the quote include, and are there situations where additional charges would apply?
- Do you set physical monuments, or do you only locate and mark existing ones?
- What format will the final plat be delivered in?
Older Clarksville Records and Research Complexity
Montgomery County has land records stretching back to the late 1700s when the city of Clarksville was established as a tobacco trading town. The Montgomery County Register of Deeds at mcgtn.org holds a deep collection of historical deeds, plats, and survey records.
For properties in the older parts of Clarksville, particularly the historic neighborhoods near downtown, Greenwood, and the areas east of the river, deed descriptions can be complex and require careful interpretation. Surveyors with strong experience in historical deed research are a better fit for these properties than firms focused primarily on new subdivision work.
Newer residential developments on the eastern and northern edges of Clarksville, and along the US 41A corridor toward Oak Grove, Kentucky, typically have cleaner and more recent plat records, making surveys faster and more predictable to price.
Cross-State Considerations Near the Kentucky Line
Communities near the county's northern border, including neighborhoods close to Oak Grove, Kentucky, sit near the state line. Tennessee-licensed surveyors can work on the Tennessee side of the boundary, but properties that straddle or sit very close to the state line may require coordination with Kentucky-licensed surveyors. Ask any firm you contact whether they have cross-border experience if your property is in this area.
Find a Surveyor in Montgomery County
Browse verified, licensed land surveyors serving Clarksville, the Fort Campbell corridor, and all of Montgomery County at our Montgomery County surveyor directory. Filter by service type, compare credentials, and connect with local professionals ready to handle your project.