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Land Surveyors in MacKinac County, MI

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

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MacKinac County Surveyor Guide

How to hire a land surveyor in MacKinac County, MI

Updated for 2026 · 5 min read

How to find a land surveyor in Mackinac County, Michigan

If you need a land surveyor in Mackinac County, Michigan, start by narrowing down the exact job: boundary line confirmation, a mortgage or sale closing survey, construction staking, a lot split, or flood-zone related work. Then contact firms early. Mackinac County is undercovered in local listings, with only a small number of firms showing clear local office presence, so property owners in Cedarville, Hessel, Mackinac Island, Moran, Naubinway, Pointe Aux Pins, Curtis, and St. Ignace should not assume same-week availability. Ask whether the surveyor regularly works in your part of the county, what records they want first, and whether they can handle both fieldwork and final signed deliverables. In Michigan, boundary survey work should be performed or certified by a Professional Land Surveyor (PLS) licensed through state surveying licensing board.

For the best results, choose a Michigan licensed professional surveyor who can explain the scope in plain language, identify what county records matter, and tell you whether the property needs only a boundary survey or additional mapping, staking, or elevation work.

Why local survey experience matters

Local experience matters because Mackinac County is large, lightly populated, and spread across distinct communities. The U.S. Census Bureau lists 11,144 residents in the county as of the July 1, 2024 estimate, with 1,021.88 square miles of land area. That scale affects travel time, scheduling, record research, and how quickly a crew can move from office review to fieldwork. A surveyor who already knows the county's offices and local review habits can often move more efficiently.

Township and city land division rules can change the workflow

Mackinac County's Equalization Department states that each township and city has its own Land Division Ordinance, and the county directs people to contact Equalization for the appropriate ordinance. That matters for buyers, small developers, and families splitting land, because a survey that supports a land division in one jurisdiction may need different supporting paperwork or review steps than a similar split elsewhere in the county.

County records are part of the survey, not an afterthought

The Mackinac County Register of Deeds records documents affecting property ownership, including deeds, plats, mortgages, land contracts, and certain court orders involving property. Surveyors may review those documents before field crews ever step on the parcel. In practice, that means the legal description, prior plats, and recorded land history can shape the scope, timeline, and cost of the job.

Common survey projects in Mackinac County

The most common requests usually fall into a few categories. Boundary and property line surveys are common for purchases, fence questions, neighbor line disputes, and cabin or rural tract ownership questions. Topographic surveys are often needed before site planning, grading, drainage review, or waterfront improvements. Construction staking is common when a house, garage, driveway, or other improvement must be placed accurately on the lot. ALTA/NSPS surveys may be needed for commercial property, financing, or more complex title review.

Lot splits and subdivision work also come up often in counties where township and city land division rules matter. If your project involves creating a new parcel, changing access, or confirming how a parent tract can be divided, tell the surveyor that upfront so the fieldwork and mapping match the approval path.

Flood and elevation work may be part of the job

For low-lying or waterfront parcels, a boundary survey may not answer every permitting or lending question. FEMA's federal flood maps is the official source for flood hazard mapping, and some Mackinac County projects may need an elevation certificate in addition to boundary work. A qualified surveyor can tell you whether FEMA mapping is likely to matter for the parcel and whether the project calls for elevation data, not just corners and lines.

Which Mackinac County records and offices matter most

For survey customers, three county resources stand out. First, the Register of Deeds is the place to look for recorded land documents that affect title and legal descriptions. Second, the Equalization Department provides parcel data and tax-oriented parcel resources that help identify the tract being surveyed. Third, Mackinac County GIS offers online mapping tools. The county's GIS page says the web map includes the county parcel layer for free viewing and searching, and that detailed parcel information in the Land Records Portal is currently available in Mackinac County with a minimal transaction fee. That combination is useful when you are trying to gather parcel identifiers, adjacent ownership clues, and general map context before hiring a surveyor.

Mackinac County also maintains a county surveyor office, and the county planning commission provides access to planning resources and the county master plan. Even when those offices are not the direct place to order a private survey, they help frame how land use and public records fit together in the county.

What to have ready before contacting firms

Basic parcel identification

Have the property address, tax parcel number, township or city, and any known subdivision or plat name. If the parcel is on Mackinac Island, in Hessel, near Cedarville, or in a more rural area such as Moran or Naubinway, say that immediately so the firm can judge travel and scheduling.

Your deed, title documents, and project goal

Send the deed or legal description if you have it. If a title company, lender, attorney, or builder gave you requirements, forward those too. The surveyor needs to know whether you are buying, selling, building, dividing land, resolving a line issue, or checking flood-zone implications.

Timing, access, and site conditions

Explain your deadline and whether the site is vacant, wooded, improved, fenced, or occupied seasonally. If access is limited, if a structure is close to a line, or if you think a shoreline or mapped flood area may affect the job, mention it during the first call. That helps the surveyor quote the right scope and avoids surprises later.

Start your Mackinac County search

If you are comparing options now, use the local directory page at /michigan/mackinac/ to review current Mackinac County surveyor listings. Because local coverage is limited, it is smart to contact listed firms early and ask whether they also serve your exact community, timeline, and project type.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a licensed surveyor for boundary work in Michigan?

Yes. Boundary and other professional land surveying work in Michigan should be handled by a licensed Professional Surveyor under the state licensing system overseen by LARA and the State Board of Professional Surveyors.

How early should I contact a land surveyor in Mackinac County?

Contact firms as early as possible. This county is undercovered in local listings, so buyers, builders, and sellers should expect limited availability and should ask about scheduling, travel range, and seasonal timing.

What should I have ready before calling a surveyor?

Have the site address, parcel number, deed or legal description, any title work, your deadline, and a clear description of the project, such as a boundary line, lot split, staking, or elevation certificate.

Which county offices are useful for Mackinac County survey research?

Surveyors often start with the Mackinac County Register of Deeds for recorded land documents, the Equalization Department for parcel data, and the county GIS tools for map review and parcel lookup.

Do waterfront or flood-zone properties need more than a boundary survey?

Sometimes. A qualified surveyor can confirm whether a FEMA mapped flood zone affects the parcel and whether an elevation certificate is needed in addition to boundary work.

Sources

  1. U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts: Mackinac County, Michigan
  2. Register of Deeds | Mackinac County
  3. GIS | Mackinac County
  4. FEMA Flood Map Service Center
  5. National Flood Insurance Program
  6. Surveyors, Professional | Michigan LARA
  7. Equalization | Mackinac County
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 MacKinac County

Do I need a licensed surveyor for boundary work in Michigan?+

Yes. Boundary and other professional land surveying work in Michigan should be handled by a licensed Professional Surveyor under the state licensing system overseen by LARA and the State Board of Professional Surveyors.

How early should I contact a land surveyor in Mackinac County?+

Contact firms as early as possible. This county is undercovered in local listings, so buyers, builders, and sellers should expect limited availability and should ask about scheduling, travel range, and seasonal timing.

What should I have ready before calling a surveyor?+

Have the site address, parcel number, deed or legal description, any title work, your deadline, and a clear description of the project, such as a boundary line, lot split, staking, or elevation certificate.

Which county offices are useful for Mackinac County survey research?+

Surveyors often start with the Mackinac County Register of Deeds for recorded land documents, the Equalization Department for parcel data, and the county GIS tools for map review and parcel lookup.

Do waterfront or flood-zone properties need more than a boundary survey?+

Sometimes. A qualified surveyor can confirm whether a FEMA mapped flood zone affects the parcel and whether an elevation certificate is needed in addition to boundary work.