Land Survey Costs in Adams County, Nebraska
Adams County sits in south-central Nebraska's Republican River basin, with Hastings as the county seat and largest city. The county's survey market reflects a mix of urban residential work in Hastings and agricultural parcel surveys across the surrounding farmland, including the communities of Kenesaw and Juniata. Republican River flood zone activity also drives elevation certificate demand throughout the county.
Adams County Survey Cost by Type
Residential Boundary Survey in Hastings: $500 to $1,100
Standard residential boundary surveys in Hastings, the county's largest city with roughly 25,000 residents, typically cost $500 to $1,100. Platted lots in Hastings' established neighborhoods and newer residential areas have accessible records at the Adams County Register of Deeds. Larger lots and properties with easement complications run toward the higher end of this range.
Agricultural Parcels (Kenesaw, Juniata, Rural County): $800 to $2,500+
The vast majority of Adams County's land area is agricultural, and farm parcel surveys are a significant part of the local surveying workload. A standard 40- to 160-acre farm parcel in Adams County requires more fieldwork than a residential lot, involving PLSS monument research and recovery in areas where original government corners have sometimes been disturbed by cultivation and drainage construction. Costs for agricultural parcels run $800 to $2,500 or more depending on acreage and the condition of existing monuments.
Small farming communities like Kenesaw and Juniata are surrounded by agricultural land where rural parcel surveys are common for land transactions, fence disputes, and drainage easement documentation.
Elevation Certificate: $350 to $600
Adams County's location in the Republican River basin gives it significant flood zone activity. The Republican River has a history of major flooding in Nebraska, and FEMA flood maps for the Hastings area and the Republican River corridor designate Special Flood Hazard Areas affecting some properties. Elevation certificates for homes in these zones cost $350 to $600 for standard single-family structures.
ALTA Survey (Commercial): $2,000 to $4,000+
Commercial real estate transactions in Hastings require ALTA surveys for lender and title insurance requirements. Hastings' commercial sector, including retail, light industrial, and healthcare properties, generates periodic demand for ALTA surveys. Costs run $2,000 to $4,000 or more for standard commercial parcels.
What Affects Survey Cost in Adams County
| Factor | Effect on Cost |
|---|---|
| Urban vs. rural location | Hastings platted lots cost less to survey than rural Kenesaw or Juniata parcels |
| Parcel acreage | Agricultural parcels with large acreage require significantly more fieldwork |
| PLSS monument condition | Missing or disturbed corners in agricultural areas require recovery or reconstruction |
| Republican River flood zone | Flood-adjacent properties may need elevation certificates alongside boundary work |
| Survey type | ALTA surveys cost more than residential boundary surveys |
Adams County Terrain and Survey Conditions
Adams County lies on the flat to gently rolling terrain of the central Great Plains. The Republican River and its tributaries cut through the county's southern portions, and the Platte River watershed influences drainage patterns in the northern part of the county. This generally flat agricultural terrain keeps fieldwork conditions straightforward for most parcels, though flood zone mapping along the Republican River corridor affects some properties.
The county's agricultural character means PLSS monument condition is a significant variable in rural survey costs. Original government corners on farmland have often been disturbed by decades of cultivation and tile drainage work. A licensed LPLS familiar with Adams County's section corner records and the local PLSS history will be better positioned to locate these monuments efficiently.
Nebraska LPLS Licensing in Adams County
All survey work in Adams County must be performed by a Licensed Professional Land Surveyor holding a current LPLS license from NSBEPA under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 81-8,101. Every surveyor in our directory is sourced from state licensing records. Unlicensed survey work has no legal standing and cannot be recorded with the Adams County Register of Deeds.
Find licensed land surveyors serving Adams County at our Adams County land surveyor directory.