Start Here: What You Actually Want
When Florida property owners say they want to find their property lines, they usually mean one of three things: they want a rough idea of where the line sits, they want to locate the physical corner markers, or they want a legally certified boundary they can rely on for a fence, permit, or dispute. Each of those goals calls for a different approach.
Step 1: Use Your County Property Appraiser's GIS Viewer
Every Florida county has a property appraiser website that includes a GIS parcel viewer. These tools show the approximate shape and location of your parcel overlaid on aerial imagery. They are free, require no account, and are a reasonable first step for understanding your property's general boundaries.
To find your county's parcel viewer:
- Search for "[your county] property appraiser" in any browser.
- Look for a property search or GIS map tool on the site.
- Enter your property address or parcel ID to pull up your parcel.
A few examples of Florida county parcel viewers:
- Miami-Dade: miamidade.gov/pa/property_search.asp
- Broward: bcpa.net
- Orange County: ocpafl.org
- Hillsborough: hcpafl.org
- Pinellas: pcpao.gov
These maps are approximate. The parcel boundaries shown are based on recorded plat data and aerial photography, and they carry a margin of error that can be several feet in either direction. They are useful for getting oriented, but they cannot tell you exactly where the legal line sits in the field.
Step 2: Pull the Recorded Plat or Deed
Your property's legal description comes from either a recorded plat (for subdivided properties) or your deed (for metes and bounds properties). Both are public records in Florida and available at the county clerk's office or online.
Recorded Plats
If your home is in a subdivision, there is a recorded plat that shows the original lot layout, dimensions, and easements. Plats are filed with the county clerk of courts and are public record. Most Florida counties provide online access:
- Search your county clerk's website for "official records" or "plat search."
- Or visit the county property appraiser site and click through to the legal description, which will reference the plat book and page number.
The plat gives you lot dimensions and shows easements. It does not tell you exactly where the corners sit in the field today, but it gives a licensed surveyor the data needed to find them.
Metes and Bounds Descriptions
For rural or older properties not in a platted subdivision, the legal description in your deed describes the property using compass bearings and distances. These descriptions can be difficult for non-surveyors to interpret and translate into actual field locations. If your property uses a metes and bounds description, a licensed surveyor is almost always necessary to locate the boundary accurately.
Step 3: Look for Existing Corner Markers
Florida property corners are typically marked with iron pins, rebar, or concrete monuments set by the surveyor who originally platted or surveyed the land. If you have a prior survey, it should show the type and location of these markers.
Finding them in the field:
- Check the corners of your yard where fence lines meet, where the lot appears to change direction, and at the street right-of-way line.
- Corner markers are often flush with the ground or just below the surface, buried under soil, sod, or landscaping.
- An inexpensive metal detector can help locate buried iron pins.
- Look for orange or pink survey flags nearby, which sometimes mark recently located corners.
Important: you can look for markers, but you cannot legally establish or move them yourself. Only a licensed Florida PSM can certify corner locations. If you find a marker, do not disturb it.
Step 4: Review Any Prior Survey on File
If you bought your home with a mortgage, there is likely a survey from the closing. Check your closing documents or contact the title company that handled your purchase. Prior surveys may also be on file at the county clerk's office or with the surveying firm that prepared them.
A prior survey can tell you:
- The dimensions of your lot as of the survey date
- Where corners were set at the time of the survey
- Any easements, encroachments, or boundary notes that were flagged
Prior surveys are starting points, not definitive answers. If the survey is more than a few years old, corners may have been disturbed, and conditions on the ground may have changed.
Florida-Specific Resources for Property Line Research
Florida Geographic Data Library (FGDL)
The University of Florida maintains the Florida Geographic Data Library at fgdl.org. It provides statewide GIS datasets including parcel boundaries, aerial imagery, and land use data. Most homeowners will find their county property appraiser's viewer easier to use, but the FGDL is useful for comparing data or accessing statewide parcel data layers.
Florida Department of Transportation Right-of-Way Maps
FDOT maintains right-of-way maps that show the boundaries of state road rights-of-way. If your property fronts a state road, these maps can help you understand where the public right-of-way ends and your private property begins. Available at fdot.gov/rightofway.
County Clerk Official Records Search
Deeds, recorded plats, easements, and other documents affecting your property are recorded with the county clerk. Most Florida county clerks provide online official records search tools, typically at myflclerk.com or the individual county clerk website.
When to Hire a Licensed Florida Surveyor
Online tools, old surveys, and corner markers give you context, but there are situations where only a licensed Florida PSM can give you an answer you can actually rely on:
- You are building a fence, shed, addition, or other structure near the property line.
- You have a dispute with a neighbor over where the line sits.
- You are applying for a building permit that requires a certified survey.
- You are buying or selling property and the transaction requires a current survey.
- You cannot locate existing corner markers or they appear to have been disturbed.
- Your legal description is a metes and bounds description that is difficult to interpret.
A boundary survey from a licensed Florida PSM gives you a certified, legally defensible answer. It is the only way to know with certainty where your property lines sit.
What a Licensed Survey Costs in Florida
A standard residential boundary survey in Florida typically costs:
- Standard platted lot under 0.5 acres: $350 to $700
- Lot between 0.5 and 1 acre: $500 to $900
- Rural or irregular parcel: $700 to $1,500
- Metes and bounds property with limited prior records: $1,000 to $2,500 or more
Get quotes from at least two licensed PSMs. Provide your parcel ID number, available from your county property appraiser's website, to help surveyors give you an accurate estimate.
Use the directory to find licensed surveyors near you in Florida. Compare by location, read reviews, and contact multiple firms to find the right fit for your property.