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Land Surveyors in Richmond County, VA

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Richmond County Surveyor Guide

How to hire a land surveyor in Richmond County, VA

Updated for 2026 · 5 min read

How do I find a land surveyor in Richmond County, Virginia?

Start with a Virginia licensed land surveyor, then ask whether the office regularly works in Richmond County and can handle rural parcels, shoreline-adjacent lots, and older deed descriptions. If you are searching for a land surveyor Richmond County Virginia property owners can trust, the best fit is usually a firm that can read local plats, compare them with county tax maps and GIS data, and explain whether your job is a boundary survey, a house location survey, a subdivision plat, or a construction staking assignment.

Richmond County has limited listing coverage, so it is smart to contact surveyors early. Tell them the property location, the type of project, and whether the site is in or near Warsaw, Farnham, Haynesville, Sharps, Village, or another rural area. If the parcel is near the Rappahannock River or another low-lying area, mention that up front so the surveyor can decide whether extra research is needed before they field work.

Why local survey experience matters here

Richmond County sits on the north side of the Rappahannock River and covers about 192 square miles. The county seat is Warsaw, and the county says it sits at the crossroads of U.S. Route 360 and State Route 3. That matters because survey work here often starts with records research and ends with a site visit on roads, parcels, and access points that are not laid out like a dense subdivision.

Local experience also matters because county records and land use review are centered in Warsaw. Surveyors who already work the area are usually more efficient when they need to compare field measurements with older deeds, recorded plats, tax maps, and county mapping layers. For buyers and owners, that can reduce back-and-forth before closing, permitting, or building.

County records are a big part of the job

Richmond County's Circuit Court records have been computerized back to 1753 and are available through secure remote access. That gives surveyors a long paper trail to work from when a parcel has changed hands many times or when old boundaries need to be reconciled with what exists on the ground. The county's online mapping also provides road, address, and property ownership information, plus aerial photography, topography, and links to property record cards.

Older descriptions can still control the boundary

In a county with rural and long-held parcels, a surveyor may need to sort through metes and bounds language, old corners, and improvements that do not match the current fence line. A good local surveyor knows when to rely on the record, when to verify occupation, and when to ask for more documents before staking anything in the field.

Common survey projects in Richmond County

Most property owners call a surveyor for one of a few common reasons: to buy or sell land, to settle a fence or encroachment question, to build an addition, or to divide land for family or development use. In Richmond County, those jobs often require both field work and careful record review because parcels can be large, irregular, or tied to older rural descriptions.

Boundary and house location surveys

Boundary surveys show where a parcel lines up on the ground. House location surveys or physical surveys are often ordered for closings, refinances, or before construction starts. If you are adding a driveway, shed, porch, or fence, a surveyor can help confirm setbacks and avoid building over a line you do not own.

Plats, subdivisions, and land use work

For lots that are being divided or recombined, a surveyor may prepare subdivision plats, boundary line adjustments, or easement plats. Richmond County's Planning and Zoning office says zoning and land disturbing permits must be issued before building permits, and some applications, including special exceptions, variances, Bay Act exceptions, wetlands, and rezonings, require a public hearing. Those filings must be submitted with complete documents four weeks before the hearing deadline, so the survey timeline matters.

Drainage, wetlands, and river-adjacent parcels

Some parcels in Richmond County sit close to water, drainage ways, or environmentally sensitive areas. The county's Wetlands Board reviews projects within its jurisdiction, and that can affect how a site is measured, designed, or submitted for approval. If your lot involves shoreline access, a ditch, drainage work, or a water-adjacent improvement, ask the surveyor whether the base map should account for those constraints before you file plans.

What to have ready before you contact firms

Bring the basics first: your deed, any prior survey or plat, the tax map or parcel number, and the property address. If the parcel has been in your family for years, tell the surveyor that too. Older deeds and informal corner markers can change how quickly a crew can tie the record to the ground.

Be clear about the end use

Say whether you need the survey for a fence, closing, refinance, building permit, subdivision, commercial site work, or an easement. The more specific you are, the easier it is for the surveyor to price the work and tell you whether a simple field visit is enough or whether they need a title report, courthouse research, or county review first.

Ask about county review timing

If your project may touch zoning, wetlands, or land disturbance, ask early about timing. Richmond County's online services and mapping tools can help support research, but the surveyor should still confirm what the county will need before you submit a permit package. That is especially important if the work has to line up with a public hearing schedule or a building permit deadline.

What Virginia licensing should look like

Virginia regulates land surveyors through the APELSCIDLA Board, and the state code says a land surveyor is someone whose competence is attested by the Board through licensure. The Code of Virginia also describes land surveying as work that can include establishing or reestablishing boundaries, determining topography, and locating physical improvements. For Richmond County customers, that means you should expect a licensed professional who can explain the record basis for the survey, not just someone with a measuring tool.

That licensing matters when the work affects ownership, improvements, or future permits. If you are comparing firms, ask who will sign the survey, whether they are licensed in Virginia, and whether they have recent experience with the type of property you own. For a county with a mix of rural tracts and village-style lots, that experience is part of the value.

Start with Richmond County surveyor listings

Once you know the project type and the records you have, use the Richmond County surveyor listings to compare nearby offices and reach out early. For properties in Warsaw and the surrounding county, a good first call can save time on courthouse research, permit questions, and field scheduling.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a licensed land surveyor in Richmond County, Virginia?

Yes, for boundary work, plats, and most property questions, hire a Virginia licensed land surveyor. Virginia licenses land surveyors through the APELSCIDLA Board.

What should I have ready before I call a surveyor?

Have your deed, plat, parcel number, tax map if you have it, closing documents, and a short description of the work you need, such as a fence, addition, purchase, or subdivision.

How long does a survey usually take in Richmond County?

Timing depends on records, weather, access, and scope. Rural parcels, waterfront lots, and projects that need county review often take longer than a simple house location survey.

Can a surveyor help with zoning or wetlands questions?

A surveyor can prepare the base information and plats that support a permit request, but Richmond County still reviews zoning, land disturbing, variance, special exception, Bay Act, and wetlands matters through its own process.

Why does local experience matter here?

Richmond County has a mix of rural parcels, older records, and river-adjacent properties. A local surveyor is more likely to know how to work from county land records, tax maps, and GIS data.

Sources

  1. Richmond County VA About Us
  2. Richmond County VA Online Services
  3. Richmond County Circuit Court Records
  4. Richmond County Applications / Land Use Information
  5. Virginia APELSCIDLA Board
  6. Virginia Code Title 54.1, Chapter 4
  7. FEMA Flood Map Service Center
Virginia cost guide

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

Read the Virginia cost guide →

Common questions about land surveys in Richmond County

Do I need a licensed land surveyor in Richmond County, Virginia?+

Yes, for boundary work, plats, and most property questions, hire a Virginia licensed land surveyor. Virginia licenses land surveyors through the APELSCIDLA Board.

What should I have ready before I call a surveyor?+

Have your deed, plat, parcel number, tax map if you have it, closing documents, and a short description of the work you need, such as a fence, addition, purchase, or subdivision.

How long does a survey usually take in Richmond County?+

Timing depends on records, weather, access, and scope. Rural parcels, waterfront lots, and projects that need county review often take longer than a simple house location survey.

Can a surveyor help with zoning or wetlands questions?+

A surveyor can prepare the base information and plats that support a permit request, but Richmond County still reviews zoning, land disturbing, variance, special exception, Bay Act, and wetlands matters through its own process.

Why does local experience matter here?+

Richmond County has a mix of rural parcels, older records, and river-adjacent properties. A local surveyor is more likely to know how to work from county land records, tax maps, and GIS data.