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Land Surveyors in Northampton County, PA

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

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3 surveyors in Northampton County
Northampton County Surveyor Guide

How to hire a land surveyor in Northampton County, PA

Updated for 2026 · 4 min read

How to find a land surveyor in Northampton County

If you need a land surveyor in Northampton County, Pennsylvania, start by matching the survey type to the decision you are making. Boundary surveys are common for fences, additions, purchases, and acreage questions. Residential location or mortgage surveys may come up during a closing. Small developers and builders often need topographic surveys, subdivision plans, lot line revisions, or construction staking. Commercial buyers may need an ALTA/NSPS survey. If a property is in a mapped flood zone, ask whether elevation work or an elevation certificate may also be needed.

Northampton County is a large and active county, with a 2020 Census population of 312,951, and its work ranges from urban and older neighborhood lots in Easton and Northampton to village, township, and rural parcels around Bangor, Bath, Cherryville, Ackermanville, and Danielsville. The directory currently shows a limited number of local offices, so it is smart to contact firms early, especially if you need field work tied to a closing, permit set, or construction schedule.

Why local survey experience matters

Local experience matters because Northampton County projects are shaped by county record systems, parcel mapping rules, and municipal approvals, not just by field measurements. A surveyor who already works in this county is more likely to know which offices to check first, how parcel identifiers are handled, and when a municipal approval or county review can affect timing.

County recording and parcel workflow

The Northampton County Recorder of Deeds is responsible for recording, filing, imaging, retrieval, and maintenance of deeds, mortgages, and other real-estate-related documents. That matters because many boundary and title questions start with the recorded chain of title and related documents. On the mapping side, the county GIS division states that engineering plans must be submitted for GIS review before recording, and subdivision plans require at least a 24-hour processing period for parcel number assignment.

Municipal context still matters

Even when county records are central, municipal rules can affect the job. Northampton County GIS notes that written approval from the municipality is required for parcel consolidations. For a lot line adjustment, subdivision, or consolidation, a surveyor with local experience can usually tell you whether the county step, the municipal step, or both will drive the schedule.

Common survey projects in Northampton County

Residential and purchase-related surveys

Homeowners and buyers commonly hire a surveyor for a boundary survey before building a fence, garage, pool, or addition, or when a purchase involves unclear corners, old occupation lines, or extra acreage. In older neighborhoods near Easton or borough settings such as Bangor, Bath, and Northampton, the practical issue is often whether visible improvements actually sit where everyone assumes they do.

Site planning, subdivision, and construction work

Builders, agents, and small developers often need topographic surveys for drainage and site design, subdivision plans, lot consolidations, and construction staking. In Northampton County, those jobs benefit from understanding the county GIS review process ahead of recording. The county also says parcel certification fees apply per parcel on plan submissions, so a surveyor should be able to explain how parcel count affects cost and processing.

Flood-zone and elevation work

For properties in mapped flood areas, the survey scope can expand beyond an ordinary boundary layout. A surveyor can help confirm whether FEMA mapping affects the parcel and whether elevation data should be part of the assignment. That is especially important before finalizing plans, permits, or lender documents tied to a structure near a mapped floodplain.

Records and maps that shape the job

Northampton County gives survey customers a better starting point than many counties because several official tools are public and easy to describe. The Assessment Office maintains county property values and offers online assessment data. The county GIS division provides interactive maps, including an interactive tax map that shows parcel lines. The same county map page also lists tools such as a pipeline map, which can be useful early in due diligence for larger rural or development tracts.

Older records and in-person research

For older parcels, research may still extend beyond what is easiest to see online. Northampton County Archives explains that microfilmed records are available only at the courthouse office of origin, and that the Landex system for Recorder of Deeds research is available at both the Recorder of Deeds office and the Archives building. That does not mean every job requires in-person archival work, but it is a reminder that older title and plan questions can take more than a quick parcel lookup.

What to have ready before contacting firms

To get a useful quote, have the property address, tax parcel number, deed reference if available, and any prior survey or plot plan. If you are planning construction, provide a sketch, site plan, or permit concept. If the issue is a fence, encroachment, driveway, or lot split, say that directly. Good photos save time.

Questions worth asking

Ask what type of survey fits your goal, whether research in county and municipal records is included, whether corner monumentation or staking is part of the scope, and whether the work will be certified by a Pennsylvania Professional Land Surveyor. If your project involves subdivision, parcel consolidation, or a plan that will be recorded, ask whether the surveyor expects Northampton County GIS review or municipal approvals to affect timing.

It is also reasonable to ask how long the research phase usually takes versus the field phase. In a county with active assessment, GIS, and recording systems, timing can depend less on travel distance and more on the exact record and plan path your property requires.

Start with Northampton County listings

If you are comparing options now, start with the local directory page for Northampton County surveyors. Use it to identify firms serving Easton, Northampton, and the wider Lehigh Valley side of the county, then contact candidates with your parcel details and project type so you can compare scope, timing, and next steps.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know a surveyor is properly licensed in Pennsylvania?

Land surveying in Pennsylvania is regulated by the State Registration Board for Professional Engineers, Land Surveyors and Geologists. Ask whether the work will be signed by a Pennsylvania Professional Land Surveyor and have the firm confirm the license details with you.

What should I gather before calling a Northampton County surveyor?

Start with the property address, parcel number if you have it, your deed or title paperwork, any older survey or subdivision plan, and a clear explanation of the project. Photos of fences, driveways, additions, or disputed corners also help.

Why does Northampton County local experience matter for subdivisions or lot changes?

Northampton County GIS reviews engineering plans before recording, and subdivision plans need parcel number assignment before they are recorded. A surveyor familiar with that workflow can usually frame the scope, timing, and required municipal coordination more accurately.

Can a surveyor help if my property may be in a flood zone?

Yes. A qualified surveyor can review mapped flood-zone context, determine whether field elevations are needed, and tell you if an elevation certificate is likely to be part of the job.

Where do surveyors usually research property records in Northampton County?

Surveyors may research recorded real estate documents through the Recorder of Deeds, parcel and assessment information through county assessment and GIS tools, and municipal subdivision or zoning records where they apply.

Sources

  1. U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts: Northampton County, Pennsylvania
  2. Northampton County Recorder of Deeds
  3. Guide to GIS Submissions and Costs | Northampton County, PA
  4. Pennsylvania State Registration Board for Professional Engineers, Land Surveyors and Geologists
  5. Pennsylvania Engineer, Land Surveyor and Geologist Registration Law
  6. FEMA Flood Map Service Center
  7. Northampton County Assessment
Pennsylvania cost guide

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Common questions about land surveys in Northampton County

How do I know a surveyor is properly licensed in Pennsylvania?+

Land surveying in Pennsylvania is regulated by the State Registration Board for Professional Engineers, Land Surveyors and Geologists. Ask whether the work will be signed by a Pennsylvania Professional Land Surveyor and have the firm confirm the license details with you.

What should I gather before calling a Northampton County surveyor?+

Start with the property address, parcel number if you have it, your deed or title paperwork, any older survey or subdivision plan, and a clear explanation of the project. Photos of fences, driveways, additions, or disputed corners also help.

Why does Northampton County local experience matter for subdivisions or lot changes?+

Northampton County GIS reviews engineering plans before recording, and subdivision plans need parcel number assignment before they are recorded. A surveyor familiar with that workflow can usually frame the scope, timing, and required municipal coordination more accurately.

Can a surveyor help if my property may be in a flood zone?+

Yes. A qualified surveyor can review mapped flood-zone context, determine whether field elevations are needed, and tell you if an elevation certificate is likely to be part of the job.

Where do surveyors usually research property records in Northampton County?+

Surveyors may research recorded real estate documents through the Recorder of Deeds, parcel and assessment information through county assessment and GIS tools, and municipal subdivision or zoning records where they apply.