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Land Surveyors in Coahoma County, MS

3 surveyors 1 cities covered Boundary survey $350 to $900

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3 surveyors in Coahoma County
Coahoma County Surveyor Guide

How to hire a land surveyor in Coahoma County, MS

Updated for 2026 · 5 min read

How to find a land surveyor in Coahoma County, Mississippi

If you need a land surveyor Coahoma County Mississippi property owners can rely on, start with firms that regularly work in Clarksdale and the surrounding county. Coahoma County is not a market with dozens of local listings, so it helps to call early, describe the property clearly, and ask whether the surveyor handles your exact job type. For most owners, buyers, agents, and builders, the right first step is to match the project to the survey type: boundary work for a fence or purchase, topographic work for drainage or site design, construction staking for a build, or flood-related elevation work where mapped floodplain conditions apply.

Local context matters here. The 2020 Census counted 21,390 residents in Coahoma County, with Clarksdale as the county seat and main courthouse location. In practice, that means many survey jobs center on Clarksdale addresses, while rural tracts near Coahoma, Friars Point, Lula, Lyon, Sherard, Jonestown, and Farrell may require more deed and occupation research before the surveyor can set or confirm corners.

Why local survey experience matters

A surveyor who knows Coahoma County can usually spot issues faster than someone treating the county like a generic assignment. This part of the Mississippi Delta includes town lots, agricultural land, road frontage questions, drainage concerns, and floodplain review that can change the fieldwork and the final deliverable.

Delta parcel patterns

County zoning regulations identify ten zoning districts, including A-1 Agricultural, several residential districts, commercial districts, and industrial zoning. That mix matters because the survey approach for a house lot in or near Clarksdale is different from the approach for acreage, a family division, or a roadside commercial tract in the county.

Floodplain awareness

Coahoma County's hazard mitigation annex states that about 188.5 square miles, or 32.2 percent of the county's land area, falls in FEMA zones A and AE based on the county-level DFIRM data referenced there. That does not mean every parcel is in a high-risk zone, but it does mean flood mapping comes up often enough that local experience is valuable. If your tract is near drainage features or mapped floodplain, ask whether the surveyor can confirm flood-zone location and whether elevation certificate support is part of the scope.

Common survey projects in the county

Most requests in Coahoma County fall into a handful of practical categories.

Residential boundary surveys

These are common for home purchases, fence placement, encroachments, inherited property, and older lot lines that need to be marked on the ground. If you are buying in Clarksdale or one of the smaller communities, a boundary survey can help confirm what is being conveyed before closing or improvements.

Rural acreage and family divisions

Outside the main city areas, owners often need larger-tract boundary work, acreage splits, or surveys to support a family transfer. These jobs can take longer when legal descriptions are older, monuments are sparse, or multiple parcels need to be reconciled.

Building, site, and access work

Builders and small developers may need topographic surveys, construction staking, or route and easement surveys tied to access, utilities, and drainage. In Coahoma County, permit planning can overlap with survey timing, so it is smart to line up the survey before finalizing your build schedule.

Records, permits, and parcel research

Surveyors in Mississippi often compare deed, plat, tax, map, and field evidence to determine where the boundary lies. In Coahoma County, planning and permit guidance adds a few specific points worth knowing before you call.

Tax parcel ID is part of permit preparation

The Coahoma County Planning Department's building permit steps say you must get a tax parcel ID number from the Tax Collector's office before a building permit can be issued. If your project involves a new house, addition, shop, or other permitted improvement, have that parcel ID ready when you speak with both the county and your surveyor.

Zoning and setbacks should be checked early

The same county planning materials direct applicants to obtain zoning approval and setbacks through the planning process. The county zoning regulations also state that the official zoning map remains on file in the office of the Zoning Administrator. If your survey is tied to a new build, lot split, or commercial site, tell the surveyor what you are trying to permit so boundary, access, and setback questions can be addressed in the right order.

What to have ready before contacting firms

You will get better pricing and faster scheduling if you prepare the basics before making calls.

Bring the site address, owner name, and a copy of the deed if you have it. Add any prior survey, plat, title commitment, or legal description from your closing file. If the tract is rural, note nearby roads, gates, field entrances, and whether corners are believed to be marked. If the survey is for a build, include the tax parcel ID, rough improvement location, and any timing tied to permit review or contractor mobilization.

It also helps to say exactly what success looks like. For example: mark all corners for a fence, identify encroachments before closing, prepare a topographic survey for drainage design, or support a permit and setbacks review. A clear request lets the surveyor decide whether you need a boundary survey, ALTA/NSPS survey, topo survey, staking, or a combination.

Choosing the right surveyor for your project

Ask whether the work will be performed under a Mississippi Professional Surveyor license, whether the firm has recent Coahoma County field experience, and what deliverable you will receive. For floodplain-adjacent property, ask whether the scope includes flood-zone review or elevations if needed. For permit-related projects, ask whether the surveyor regularly coordinates with county planning expectations.

Because this directory currently shows a limited number of local offices, do not wait until the last week before closing or construction. Early outreach gives you better odds of securing field time and resolving title, parcel, or flood questions before they become schedule problems.

Start with Coahoma County listings

To compare available options, review the local directory at /mississippi/coahoma/. It is the fastest place to start if you need a land surveyor in Coahoma County, Mississippi and want to narrow the search to firms serving Clarksdale and the surrounding county.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does a Coahoma County surveyor need to be licensed in Mississippi?

Yes. Boundary and other professional land surveying work in Mississippi should be signed by a Professional Surveyor licensed through the Mississippi Board of Licensure for Professional Engineers and Surveyors.

What should I gather before calling a surveyor in Coahoma County?

Have the property address, owner name, deed if available, tax parcel ID, any prior survey or plat, and a clear description of your project, such as a fence, closing, lot split, or building permit.

Why does the tax parcel ID matter in Coahoma County?

Coahoma County's planning guidance says a tax parcel ID from the Tax Collector's office is required before a building permit can be issued, so having that number ready helps both permitting and survey scoping.

Are flood maps important for property in Coahoma County?

Often, yes. FEMA maps and the county hazard mitigation annex show substantial mapped floodplain area in Coahoma County, so a surveyor may need to confirm flood-zone location, elevations, or whether an elevation certificate is needed.

How early should I contact a surveyor before closing or construction?

Start early. Coahoma County has only a small number of local listings in this directory, and rural boundary work, permit coordination, or flood-related questions can add time.

Sources

  1. U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts: Coahoma County, Mississippi
  2. COAHOMA COUNTY PLANNING DEPARTMENT BUILDING PERMIT STEPS
  3. Coahoma County Zoning Regulations
  4. Mississippi Board of Licensure for Professional Engineers and Surveyors
  5. Mississippi Board Licensure Law
  6. FEMA Flood Map Service Center
  7. Requirements | Mississippi Board of Licensure for Professional Engineers and Surveyors
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Common questions about land surveys in Coahoma County

Does a Coahoma County surveyor need to be licensed in Mississippi?+

Yes. Boundary and other professional land surveying work in Mississippi should be signed by a Professional Surveyor licensed through the Mississippi Board of Licensure for Professional Engineers and Surveyors.

What should I gather before calling a surveyor in Coahoma County?+

Have the property address, owner name, deed if available, tax parcel ID, any prior survey or plat, and a clear description of your project, such as a fence, closing, lot split, or building permit.

Why does the tax parcel ID matter in Coahoma County?+

Coahoma County's planning guidance says a tax parcel ID from the Tax Collector's office is required before a building permit can be issued, so having that number ready helps both permitting and survey scoping.

Are flood maps important for property in Coahoma County?+

Often, yes. FEMA maps and the county hazard mitigation annex show substantial mapped floodplain area in Coahoma County, so a surveyor may need to confirm flood-zone location, elevations, or whether an elevation certificate is needed.

How early should I contact a surveyor before closing or construction?+

Start early. Coahoma County has only a small number of local listings in this directory, and rural boundary work, permit coordination, or flood-related questions can add time.