Why You Need a Licensed Surveyor in Alabama
In Alabama, only a Professional Land Surveyor (PLS) licensed by the Alabama Board of Licensure for Professional Engineers and Land Surveyors (ALBPELS) can legally establish property boundaries. Unlicensed survey work is not legally recognized and will not be accepted by courts, title companies, or mortgage lenders. When a property dispute goes to court, judges look for surveys prepared and signed by a PLS.
Alabama also has Land Surveyor-in-Training (LSIT) candidates who work under the direct supervision of a licensed PLS. An LSIT cannot independently certify boundary work, so confirm that the firm you hire has a licensed PLS who will sign your survey.
Types of Surveyors in Alabama
Not all surveying firms specialize in the same work. When looking for a surveyor, it helps to know what type of survey you need.
- Boundary survey specialists: Handle residential and rural property line work, fence disputes, and lot splits. Most general survey firms do this work.
- ALTA/NSPS specialists: Focus on commercial real estate transactions. These surveys meet detailed standards required by title insurance companies and commercial lenders.
- Elevation certificate surveyors: Work in FEMA flood zone areas. Common in Mobile County, along the Tennessee River in north Alabama, and near major river corridors.
- Topographic and construction surveyors: Support engineering and construction projects. Handle grading plans, utility layouts, and as-built surveys for new development.
- Subdivision and platting specialists: Handle the legal process of dividing land into lots, including working with county planning offices.
Where Surveyors Are Located in Alabama
Alabama has the highest concentration of licensed surveyors in its major metro counties. Jefferson County (Birmingham) and Madison County (Huntsville) have the most firms, offering property owners multiple options and generally competitive pricing. Mobile County, Montgomery County, and Tuscaloosa County also have strong surveyor availability.
In more rural counties, particularly in the Black Belt region and extreme northeast or northwest Alabama, fewer firms operate. Property owners in those areas may work with a surveyor based in a nearby urban county who covers their area as part of a service region.
How to Evaluate a Surveyor
When getting quotes from Alabama surveyors, pay attention to the following:
- License verification: The surveyor's PLS number and seal should appear on all certified documents. Our directory sourced from ALBPELS already filters for licensure.
- County experience: Surveyors who regularly work in your county know the local deed recording patterns, typical monument types, and common deed description quirks. This saves time and reduces the risk of errors.
- Clear quote structure: A reputable firm will explain whether the quote is fixed-fee or time-and-materials. Get it in writing before work begins.
- Turnaround time: Ask for a realistic timeline. Firms with heavy backlogs may quote reasonable prices but take six to eight weeks to complete work. If you have a closing deadline, confirm the surveyor can meet it.
- Communication: A surveyor who answers questions directly and explains what they found is worth the price. Boundary issues occasionally arise during a survey, and you want a professional who communicates clearly about complications.
What to Provide When Requesting a Quote
The more information you give a surveyor upfront, the more accurate your quote will be. Have the following ready:
- Parcel number or legal description from your deed
- County where the property is located
- Approximate acreage
- Purpose of the survey (closing, fence, dispute, etc.)
- Any known issues: disputed corners, encroachments, missing monuments, or complicated deed history
Find a Licensed Surveyor by County
Our Alabama land surveyor directory lists licensed professionals organized by county, all sourced from ALBPELS records. Whether you are in Jefferson County near Birmingham, Madison County in Huntsville, or a more rural county in between, you can find firms that serve your area and contact them directly for quotes.