Massachusetts Survey Guide

Find a Land Surveyor in Plymouth County, MA

Updated for 2026 · 4 min read · Find a Surveyor

Key takeaway

Find a licensed land surveyor in Plymouth County, MA. Coastal wetland experience and South Shore property line expertise are key for many parcels.

Finding a Licensed Surveyor in Plymouth County

Plymouth County covers 40-plus miles of South Shore coastline, a significant inland cranberry bog region, and the historically complex land system of Plymouth Town. The right surveyor for a coastal Scituate property is not necessarily the right choice for a commercial subdivision in Bridgewater. Knowing what to look for narrows the search quickly.

The Plymouth County Registry of Deeds

The Plymouth County Registry of Deeds in Plymouth holds all recorded deeds, mortgages, and survey plans for Plymouth County municipalities. Searching the registry before hiring a surveyor can turn up prior plans that reduce research and fieldwork costs. Any surveyor serving Plymouth County regularly will know the registry’s indexing system and can conduct this search as part of their initial scope review.

For Plymouth Town specifically, the registry holds documents going back to the 1600s. Surveyors who work Plymouth Town frequently are comfortable navigating old deed language and the county’s historical parcel system.

Coastal Wetland Experience: Why It Matters

Properties in Marshfield, Scituate, Duxbury, Kingston, and along Plymouth Bay involve several layers of regulation that directly affect what a surveyor must do:

  • Mean high water line: The legal upland boundary for oceanfront and tidal river properties under Massachusetts law. Must be established accurately from state tidal data.
  • Massachusetts Wetlands Protection Act: Sets mandatory 100-foot buffer zones from wetland resource areas. A survey for a coastal property must show these boundaries clearly.
  • Local Conservation Commission bylaws: Many South Shore towns have additional setbacks beyond state minimums. Scituate and Marshfield have active Conservation Commissions with strict local requirements.
  • FEMA flood zones: Much of the South Shore coastline is mapped in Zone AE or Zone VE. Surveyors familiar with flood mapping can flag issues early in the project.

Cranberry Bog Surveys: A Specialized Need

Plymouth County contains thousands of acres of active and inactive cranberry bogs. If you are buying, selling, or developing land adjacent to a bog, you need a surveyor who understands water management rights, drainage easements, and wetland delineation in the cranberry bog context. These properties have specialized title issues that generalist surveyors may miss.

South Shore Property Line Disputes

Boundary disputes are common along the South Shore, particularly between older subdivisions laid out in the mid-20th century where monuments have been lost or disturbed over time. A licensed PLS who researches the full deed chain and prior plans at the registry can produce a plan showing the legally correct boundary, which is the starting point for any dispute resolution.

Where to Find Qualified Candidates

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Browse licensed land surveyors serving Plymouth, Marshfield, Scituate, Duxbury, Brockton, and all Plymouth County towns at our Plymouth County surveyor directory.

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Browse Plymouth County Surveyors

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Frequently Asked Questions

Where is the Plymouth County Registry of Deeds?

The Plymouth County Registry of Deeds is at 7 Russell Street in Plymouth, MA. Records are also searchable online at plymouthdeeds.org. The registry holds deeds, mortgages, and survey plans for all Plymouth County municipalities.

How do I find a surveyor with coastal wetland experience in Plymouth County?

Ask candidates directly whether they have completed surveys in Marshfield, Scituate, or Duxbury in the past year. Ask for references from coastal projects and whether they are familiar with Massachusetts Wetlands Protection Act filing requirements and the Conservation Commission process in those specific towns.

Do I need a surveyor for a property line dispute in Plymouth County?

Yes. A licensed Massachusetts PLS is the appropriate professional to research the title history, establish the correct boundary location from deed evidence, and produce a plan that can be used to resolve the dispute. In coastal towns, property line disputes frequently involve tidal boundaries that require additional expertise.

What is a typical survey turnaround in Plymouth County?

Standard residential boundary surveys run 3 to 5 weeks. Coastal surveys with wetland delineation can run 4 to 7 weeks. Colonial title chains in Plymouth town can add research time. Book 6 weeks ahead if you have a closing date.