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Land Surveyors in Iosco County, MI

2 surveyors 2 cities covered Boundary survey $500 to $1,500

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Iosco County Surveyor Guide

How to hire a land surveyor in Iosco County, MI

Updated for 2026 · 4 min read

How to find a land surveyor in Iosco County

If you need a land surveyor Iosco County Michigan property owners can actually hire, start by contacting firms early, describing the job clearly, and asking whether they work in your township or city. Iosco County is not an oversupplied market. This directory currently shows only a small number of local offices, so buyers, homeowners, agents, and builders should expect to compare a short list and possibly ask about nearby service coverage from outside the county.

That matters because survey scheduling depends on more than travel time. Boundary evidence, deed research, plat history, parcel mapping, and any floodplain or drainage questions can affect scope. If your property is in East Tawas, Tawas City, Oscoda, Hale, Whittemore, Long Lake, or National City, the right surveyor is usually the one who understands both the legal records and the local development pattern around that part of the county.

Why local survey experience matters

Local experience is useful in Iosco County because the county has a modest population of 25,237, spread across shoreline communities, inland lake areas, rural parcels, and small-town neighborhoods. That mix creates very different survey needs from one job to the next.

Lake Huron and inland water parcels

Waterfront and water-influenced properties need careful review. The Iosco County Drain Commissioner reports 28 county drains, 10 intercounty drains, and 1 private drain, and the office also maintains court-ordered lake levels for Long Lake, Floyd Lake, and Van Etten Lake. For a survey customer, that means drainage and water-management context can matter on subdivision plats, buildable area questions, and some lake-area improvement projects.

Rural legal descriptions and older records

Older rural parcels often require more record research before field crews arrive. The Iosco County Register of Deeds records and maintains real-estate documents including deeds, mortgages, surveys, land contracts, condominiums, and subdivisions. The office says its records date back to 1858, with older documents digitized and online indexes currently reaching back to the early 1970s. When records predate that index, an in-office search may still be part of the background work.

Common survey projects in Iosco County

The most common requests are still the basics: boundary and property line surveys for fences, purchases, sales, and neighbor questions. Those are common in Tawas-area neighborhoods, in Oscoda-area residential areas, and on larger inland parcels where occupation lines and deed descriptions do not always tell the whole story.

Boundary and lot line work

If you are buying land, resolving a line question, or placing a structure close to a setback, ask for a scope that matches the real decision you need to make. Some owners need a full boundary survey. Others may need staking, corner recovery, or a survey tied to closing documents. A licensed Michigan Professional Land Surveyor should determine what is appropriate.

Building, split, and drainage-related work

Other common projects include topographic surveys, construction staking, lot splits, subdivision plat support, and ALTA/NSPS surveys for commercial property. In Iosco County, local planning and drainage context can affect those projects. The county Planning Commission maintains the Iosco County Master Plan and coordinates zoning and planning activities across the county's townships and cities. That does not replace township or city approvals, but it is a useful signal that surveyors often work within a countywide planning framework when land is being divided or developed.

For sites near mapped flood areas, a surveyor may also confirm whether FEMA flood mapping and an elevation certificate should be part of the job.

What to have ready before contacting firms

The fastest way to get useful responses is to send clear property information up front. Good surveyors usually quote more accurately when they can review your paperwork before they schedule fieldwork.

Documents that speed up quotes

Have your site address, parcel number, deed, title commitment if you have one, and any prior survey or legal description ready to share. If the property is part of a recorded subdivision, mention the subdivision name and lot number. If you are building, include the sketch, proposed footprint, and any deadline tied to permits or lenders.

It also helps to explain the real purpose of the survey. Say whether you are closing a purchase, locating corners, planning a garage, dividing land, or dealing with a shoreline, road, or drainage issue. That short note can save several rounds of calls.

Local offices and records that shape survey work

County records often shape the survey long before anyone visits the property. In Iosco County, the Equalization Department says it keeps current and past two years of assessment rolls, section maps, subdivision plats, copies of recorded surveys, recent sale data, and taxable value information available for public inspection, along with online property and land search tools. That is highly relevant when a surveyor is tracing parcel history or checking how a parcel is described in county records.

The Register of Deeds is another common stop for document history. Depending on the assignment, surveyors may research deeds, plats, prior surveys, easements, parcel records, GIS mapping, and floodplain context where available.

Timing, coverage, and what to expect

Because local firm coverage is limited, do not wait until the week before closing or excavation. Contact firms as early as possible and ask practical questions: who signs the survey, what records they want first, how long research takes, and whether field conditions or record complexity could change the schedule. In an undercovered county, the best available firm may already be booked.

If a local firm cannot take the work quickly, ask whether they recommend a nearby licensed surveyor that also covers Iosco County. That is a more realistic strategy than assuming a long list of local options exists.

Start your search in Iosco County

Use the local directory to review available options, then contact firms with your parcel details and project goals. Start here: /michigan/iosco/.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does a land survey in Iosco County need a licensed professional?

Yes. In Michigan, land surveying is regulated by the Michigan State Board of Professional Surveyors under state law. Ask any firm you contact to confirm the license status of the surveyor responsible for your job.

What should I send before asking for a quote?

Send the site address, parcel number if you have it, your deed, title work or commitment, any old survey, and a short note describing the project. Photos, a sketch, or the planned building location can also help.

Why does county research matter so much in Iosco County?

Surveyors often need county deed, plat, parcel, GIS, assessment, and drainage context before fieldwork starts. In Iosco County, the Equalization Department and Register of Deeds can be especially important starting points.

Can a surveyor help if my property is near a lake or drain?

Usually yes. Sites near Lake Huron, Van Etten Lake, Long Lake, Floyd Lake, or county drains can require closer review of boundary evidence, access, drainage, and flood mapping. A qualified surveyor can tell you whether elevation certificate work is also needed.

How early should I contact firms in Iosco County?

Early. This directory currently shows limited local coverage, so buyers, builders, and sellers should contact firms as soon as a transaction, permit, or design decision starts taking shape.

Sources

  1. Register of Deeds | Iosco County, MI
  2. Planning Commission | Iosco County, MI
  3. FEMA Flood Map Service Center
  4. National Flood Insurance Program
  5. U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts: Iosco County, Michigan
  6. Equalization | Iosco County, MI
  7. Drain Commissioner | Iosco County, MI
Michigan cost guide

See how survey costs vary across Michigan by survey type and parcel size.

Read the Michigan cost guide →

Common questions about land surveys in Iosco County

Does a land survey in Iosco County need a licensed professional?+

Yes. In Michigan, land surveying is regulated by the Michigan State Board of Professional Surveyors under state law. Ask any firm you contact to confirm the license status of the surveyor responsible for your job.

What should I send before asking for a quote?+

Send the site address, parcel number if you have it, your deed, title work or commitment, any old survey, and a short note describing the project. Photos, a sketch, or the planned building location can also help.

Why does county research matter so much in Iosco County?+

Surveyors often need county deed, plat, parcel, GIS, assessment, and drainage context before fieldwork starts. In Iosco County, the Equalization Department and Register of Deeds can be especially important starting points.

Can a surveyor help if my property is near a lake or drain?+

Usually yes. Sites near Lake Huron, Van Etten Lake, Long Lake, Floyd Lake, or county drains can require closer review of boundary evidence, access, drainage, and flood mapping. A qualified surveyor can tell you whether elevation certificate work is also needed.

How early should I contact firms in Iosco County?+

Early. This directory currently shows limited local coverage, so buyers, builders, and sellers should contact firms as soon as a transaction, permit, or design decision starts taking shape.