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Land Surveyors in Greene County, NC

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

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3 surveyors in Greene County
Greene County Surveyor Guide

How to hire a land surveyor in Greene County, NC

Updated for 2026 · 4 min read

How to find a land surveyor in Greene County, North Carolina

If you need a land surveyor in Greene County North Carolina, start with firms that regularly work in Snow Hill, Hookerton, Walstonburg, and Maury, then ask whether they handle your exact project type. A good first call should cover three things: the kind of survey you need, the property location, and whether county review or floodplain questions are likely to affect the scope. Greene County is a smaller county, and the current directory coverage is limited, so it is smart to contact listed firms early and confirm scheduling rather than assume a large bench of local providers.

In North Carolina, land surveying is a regulated profession. You should expect a surveyor to work under a North Carolina Professional Land Surveyor license, and a qualified firm should be able to explain what records they will review before fieldwork begins. For many Greene County properties, that research may include deed references, plats, parcel mapping, and planning or permitting context where available.

Why local survey experience matters

Local experience matters because the research phase in Greene County is closely tied to county offices and county processes. Greene County's Planning and Inspections department combines building inspections, planning, zoning, and GIS in one department, and the county says that planning responsibilities include zoning administration, floodplain management, permitting, land subdivision, and E-911 address assignment. That means a surveyor with routine county experience is more likely to spot issues that affect both measurements and approvals.

County records and map review

The Greene County Register of Deeds states that it serves as custodian for real estate related documents and records deeds, deeds of trust, maps, easements, leases, and related filings. The same office provides an online index search from 1875 to the present. For older tracts, inherited land, or properties with multiple conveyances, that record depth can be important when a surveyor reconstructs a boundary.

Parcel and GIS context

Greene County also provides an online GIS mapping and parcel inquiry system through the Planning Department. The county says users can search by parcel ID, owner, or address, and printable property record cards are available. That does not replace a boundary survey, but it is useful for early parcel identification, adjoining-owner review, and planning conversations.

Floodplain and development review

For tracts near mapped flood hazard areas, a local surveyor can also help you understand whether floodplain review may affect site planning. Greene County places floodplain management inside its Planning and Zoning responsibilities, and federal flood maps is the official federal source for flood map products. In practice, that matters when a house site, addition, or land division needs a flood statement or elevation-based review.

Common survey projects in the county

Most property owners looking for a land surveyor Greene County North Carolina need one of a few common services. Boundary surveys are typical for fence placement, purchase decisions, family land transfers, and rural acreage questions. Buyers and lenders may also request a physical survey or mortgage-related survey for closing. Commercial properties may need an ALTA/NSPS survey, while builders often need topographic work or construction staking.

Small development and land division work is also common. Greene County's Planning and Zoning page includes online plat review and lists fees for minor and major subdivision plats, which tells you that platting and subdivision workflow is an active local process. If your project involves a recombination, lot split, or new build, bring that up immediately so the surveyor can price both fieldwork and county coordination correctly.

What to have ready before contacting firms

The fastest way to get a useful quote is to organize your basic property information before you call.

Documents that help

Have your deed, any prior survey or plat, the site address, tax parcel number, and a sketch or note explaining the problem you are trying to solve. If you are buying land, send the contract deadline. If you are building, share the proposed improvement location and any setback concerns.

Questions to ask

Ask whether the firm has worked recently in Greene County, whether field crews will need to recover older corners, and whether the job may require plat review, subdivision coordination, or floodplain documentation. If the property is in Snow Hill or another built-up area, also ask whether easements, rights of way, or visible occupation lines may affect the work.

Permits, plats, and flood-zone issues

County process can directly affect what your surveyor needs to deliver. Greene County states that site plans are required for all new residential construction on lots under 5 acres and for all commercial property, and that those site plans must be performed, signed, and sealed by a licensed surveyor or engineer in North Carolina. The county also says the plan should show boundary lines, bearings and distances, proposed improvements, setbacks, easements, rights of way, and a flood statement if the property is in a flood hazard area.

That requirement is important for anyone planning a new house, shop, or commercial improvement. It means your survey request should not be limited to "mark the corners" if the actual goal is permit approval. A local surveyor can tell you whether you need a simple boundary survey, a scaled site plan, a subdivision plat, or a flood-related deliverable.

How licensing works in North Carolina

North Carolina regulates land surveying through the North Carolina Board of Examiners for Engineers and Surveyors. Chapter 89C governs the practice, including who may lawfully offer surveying services. For consumers, the practical takeaway is simple: hire a firm that can clearly identify the North Carolina Professional Land Surveyor responsible for the work, explain the scope, and describe what county and state records will be checked before the crew comes out.

Start with Greene County listings

If you are ready to compare options, start with the Greene County directory page at /north-carolina/greene/. Use it to contact local firms early, compare availability, and explain whether your job involves a boundary, plat, site plan, floodplain question, or development review.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I confirm a surveyor is licensed in North Carolina?

Ask for the surveyor's North Carolina Professional Land Surveyor credential and license number. Land surveying in North Carolina is regulated by the North Carolina Board of Examiners for Engineers and Surveyors under Chapter 89C.

What should I have ready before calling a Greene County surveyor?

Have the site address, parcel number if available, deed reference, any prior plat, and a short description of your project. If the job involves new construction, setbacks, or a division of land, mention that up front.

Does Greene County have local records that help with survey research?

Yes. Surveyors may use Greene County Register of Deeds records, the county GIS parcel inquiry, and planning or permitting information when available. Those records help with deed research, parcel review, and early site screening.

When might a flood zone matter for a Greene County survey?

Flood zone review matters when a property is in or near a mapped flood hazard area, or when a lender, builder, or permit review requires elevation information. A qualified local surveyor can confirm whether an elevation certificate or flood statement may be needed.

How long does a typical survey take in Greene County?

Timing depends on acreage, terrain, record complexity, and crew availability. Small residential boundary work can move faster than rural tracts, subdivisions, or jobs that need deed research, floodplain review, or county plat review.

Sources

  1. Planning and Inspections - Greene County, North Carolina
  2. GIS - Greene County, North Carolina
  3. Register of Deeds - Greene County, North Carolina
  4. North Carolina Board of Examiners for Engineers and Surveyors
  5. North Carolina General Statutes Chapter 89C
  6. FEMA Flood Map Service Center
  7. U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts: Greene County, North Carolina
North Carolina cost guide

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

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Common questions about land surveys in Greene County

How do I confirm a surveyor is licensed in North Carolina?+

Ask for the surveyor's North Carolina Professional Land Surveyor credential and license number. Land surveying in North Carolina is regulated by the North Carolina Board of Examiners for Engineers and Surveyors under Chapter 89C.

What should I have ready before calling a Greene County surveyor?+

Have the site address, parcel number if available, deed reference, any prior plat, and a short description of your project. If the job involves new construction, setbacks, or a division of land, mention that up front.

Does Greene County have local records that help with survey research?+

Yes. Surveyors may use Greene County Register of Deeds records, the county GIS parcel inquiry, and planning or permitting information when available. Those records help with deed research, parcel review, and early site screening.

When might a flood zone matter for a Greene County survey?+

Flood zone review matters when a property is in or near a mapped flood hazard area, or when a lender, builder, or permit review requires elevation information. A qualified local surveyor can confirm whether an elevation certificate or flood statement may be needed.

How long does a typical survey take in Greene County?+

Timing depends on acreage, terrain, record complexity, and crew availability. Small residential boundary work can move faster than rural tracts, subdivisions, or jobs that need deed research, floodplain review, or county plat review.