Why the Right Surveyor Matters in Pierce County
Pierce County covers a wide range of terrain and development contexts, from Tacoma's urban core and industrial tide flats to Gig Harbor's waterfront neighborhoods, the Puyallup River valley, and the glacially carved hills of the Key Peninsula. Finding a licensed Professional Land Surveyor (PLS) with relevant experience for your specific property type and location makes the process faster and reduces the chance of problems.
Step 1 - Verify the License
Washington RCW 18.43 requires that all boundary survey work in the state be supervised by and certified by a licensed PLS. Before hiring anyone, confirm the license at dol.wa.gov. Search by name or license number and verify the license is active, covers land surveying, and has no disciplinary history. This takes a few minutes and protects you from unlicensed operators whose work has no legal standing.
Step 2 - Gather Parcel Information
Before your first call to a survey firm, look up your property on the Pierce County Assessor-Treasurer site at piercecountywa.gov/assessor. This provides your parcel number, recorded lot dimensions, and ownership records. Your parcel number lets surveyors pull deed and plat records from the Pierce County Auditor before quoting, which leads to more accurate estimates and faster project starts.
The Pierce County GIS portal at piercecountywa.gov/gis provides aerial imagery, parcel boundaries, zoning, and FEMA flood zone overlays. Use it to check whether your property is near the Puyallup River flood zone, Puget Sound shoreline, or other areas with added survey complexity.
Step 3 - Identify the Right Survey Type
Pierce County property owners most often need one of the following survey types:
- Boundary survey: Establishes legal property lines for fence permits, setback confirmation, lot line adjustments, and real estate transactions.
- Topographic survey: Maps elevation and physical features. Required for site grading, drainage design, and new construction permitting.
- Shoreline survey: Documents the ordinary high water mark and shoreline setbacks under the Washington Shoreline Management Act. Required for waterfront development in Gig Harbor, the Key Peninsula, and Puget Sound coastal areas.
- ALTA/NSPS survey: High-standard survey required by commercial lenders for property transactions.
- Elevation certificate: Documents building elevation relative to FEMA Base Flood Elevation. Required in Puyallup River valley flood zones and Puget Sound coastal areas.
Telling each surveyor exactly what type of work you need, and why, helps them quote accurately and reveals whether their experience matches your project.
Step 4 - Get Three Written Quotes
Contact at least three licensed PLS firms and give each the same information: your parcel number, approximate lot size and location, the type of survey needed, and any deadline. Ask each firm:
- Have you worked in this immediate area recently, and do you have prior control data or monument records from nearby surveys?
- What is included in this quote, and what triggers additional charges?
- What is your current turnaround time from hire to final deliverables?
- Will a licensed PLS supervise and certify the final work?
Waterfront Properties in Gig Harbor and the Key Peninsula
Gig Harbor's waterfront properties involve Shoreline Management Act setbacks, potential wetland buffers, and ordinary high water mark determinations that go beyond a standard residential boundary survey. If you are buying, building on, or improving a waterfront lot in Gig Harbor, Henderson Bay, or along the Key Peninsula, specifically ask surveyors about their experience with shoreline and critical areas work. Not every firm has this specialization, and selecting one without it can slow down the permitting process.
Puyallup River Valley Properties
Properties in Orting, Puyallup, and Sumner near the Puyallup River corridor are among Pierce County's most flood-exposed parcels. Lenders routinely require elevation certificates for transactions in this area. If you are buying in the river valley, confirm with your lender whether an elevation certificate is required and whether an existing certificate is available from the seller.
Tacoma Urban Properties
Urban Tacoma presents different challenges than the county's suburban and rural areas. Dense lot configurations, hillside properties overlooking Commencement Bay, and older neighborhoods with limited prior survey records can all increase the time needed for a boundary survey. Ask firms specifically about their experience in Tacoma and whether the neighborhood has adequate prior survey control.
Pierce County Recording and Research Resources
Recorded plats, boundary surveys, and deeds are on file with the Pierce County Auditor. Your hired PLS accesses these records during the research phase. Washington RCW 58.09 specifies when a Record of Survey must be filed with the county auditor after the survey is complete. Your PLS will advise whether filing is required and handles the submission.
Find a Licensed Surveyor Near You
Our directory lists licensed Washington Professional Land Surveyors serving Tacoma, Lakewood, Puyallup, Gig Harbor, Sumner, University Place, and the broader Pierce County area. Search Pierce County surveyors to compare firms and request quotes for your project.