How Indiana Licenses Land Surveyors
Indiana licenses land surveyors under Indiana Code IC 25-21.5. The Indiana Professional Licensing Agency (IPLA) administers the licensing program, and the Indiana State Board of Registration for Land Surveyors oversees standards, examinations, and disciplinary matters. The IPLA website is pla.in.gov.
To earn a Professional Land Surveyor (PLS) license in Indiana, a candidate must:
- Hold an accredited degree in surveying, surveying technology, or a related field (or meet alternative education requirements)
- Complete a minimum of four years of qualifying experience under the supervision of a licensed Indiana PLS
- Pass the NCEES Fundamentals of Surveying (FS) exam
- Pass the NCEES Principles and Practice of Surveying (PS) exam
- Submit a license application to the IPLA with documented experience references
PLS licenses must be renewed on a regular schedule. Indiana surveyors must meet continuing education requirements to maintain their license in good standing.
How to Verify an Indiana Surveyor's License
Before hiring any surveyor in Indiana, verify their license is active. The IPLA maintains a public license lookup tool at pla.in.gov. To check a license:
- Go to pla.in.gov and select the license lookup tool
- Search by the surveyor's name or license number
- Confirm the license type reads Professional Land Surveyor
- Confirm the license status is active and not expired, suspended, or revoked
A licensed surveyor will have no objection to you verifying their credentials. If a surveyor discourages you from checking, that is a serious red flag.
Where to Find Licensed Indiana Surveyors
Our Indiana Surveyor Directory
Our Indiana land surveyor directory lists 113 licensed surveyors across the state. You can search by county, city, or survey type to find professionals near your property. Each listing includes contact information and service areas.
Indiana Society of Professional Land Surveyors (ISPLS)
ISPLS is the professional association for Indiana's licensed land surveyors. Their website at ispls.org includes a member directory. ISPLS members participate in continuing education, professional standards development, and legislative advocacy for the profession. Membership is voluntary but signals a commitment to professional development.
IPLA License Lookup
The IPLA license database at pla.in.gov is a direct source for finding licensed Indiana PLS holders. You can search by name and location, then contact surveyors directly.
County Recorder's Office
Local county recorders often know which surveyors work most actively in their county. Surveyors who regularly record plats with a county recorder are familiar with that county's records, monuments, and historical surveying conventions, which often translates to faster and more accurate work.
Questions to Ask Before Hiring an Indiana Surveyor
Before committing to a surveyor, ask these questions to make sure they are the right fit for your project:
License and Experience
- Are you a licensed Professional Land Surveyor in Indiana? What is your IPLA license number?
- How long have you been practicing in this county or region?
- Have you surveyed properties similar to mine in this area before?
Scope and Deliverables
- What exactly is included in your quote?
- Will you set physical stakes or iron pins at the property corners?
- Will you provide a digital copy of the survey plat in addition to a paper copy?
- Will the plat be recorded with the county recorder, or will I need to do that?
Timeline
- How long will the survey take from hire to completed plat?
- What is your current workload and estimated start date?
- Are there any conditions that could extend the timeline, such as missing monuments or title research complications?
Pricing and Payment
- Is your quote a fixed fee or an estimate?
- What conditions would cause the price to increase?
- What is your payment schedule?
Red Flags When Hiring an Indiana Surveyor
Watch for these warning signs when evaluating surveyors:
- No Indiana PLS license: Anyone performing land surveying in Indiana must hold an active PLS license. An unlicensed person's survey work has no legal standing and cannot be recorded.
- Refusing license verification: Any reputable surveyor will welcome verification of their credentials at pla.in.gov.
- No written quote: A professional surveyor provides a written scope of work and fee estimate before beginning work.
- Unrealistically low price: Extremely low bids may indicate the surveyor plans to cut corners, omit monument setting, or skip necessary research.
- Pressure to skip permit or recording steps: A licensed professional follows Indiana's legal requirements for survey plats and monument recording.
- No physical stakes: If a surveyor offers only a paper document without setting corner monuments in the field, clarify whether staking is included and whether that meets your needs.
Understanding Survey Deliverables
When you hire an Indiana PLS for a boundary survey, confirm what you will receive at the end:
| Deliverable | Description |
|---|---|
| Survey plat | Stamped, signed drawing showing property dimensions, bearings, area, monuments, and legal description reference |
| Corner monuments (stakes/pins) | Iron pins or other approved markers set at property corners in the field |
| Digital file | PDF or CAD file of the plat, useful for building permits and future reference |
| Recorded plat (if applicable) | Some survey types in Indiana must be recorded with the county recorder as part of the legal process |
NCEES Examinations and Indiana Requirements
The National Council of Examiners for Engineering and Surveying (NCEES) administers the standardized exams that Indiana requires for PLS licensure. The FS exam tests fundamentals of surveying science and mathematics. The PS exam tests professional competency in actual surveying practice, including boundary law, evidence evaluation, and professional ethics.
Indiana's four-year experience requirement ensures that candidates have supervised field experience before practicing independently. This combination of education, examination, and experience is designed to protect the public from errors that could affect property rights, construction, and legal proceedings.
How to Get the Best Results from Your Indiana Surveyor
Once you hire a licensed Indiana PLS, these steps help the process go smoothly:
- Provide your deed and any prior survey documents you have on file
- Give the surveyor access to all parts of the property, including fenced or gated areas
- Let neighbors know a survey is happening if the surveyor will need to work near shared boundaries
- Ask for the plat in both paper and digital format for your records
- Store the completed plat with your deed for future reference
Start your search today in our Indiana land surveyor directory, where 113 licensed Indiana PLS holders are ready to help with your project.