Wisconsin › Milwaukee County

Land Surveyors in Milwaukee County, WI

21 surveyors 8 cities covered

Find licensed professional land surveyors in Milwaukee County, Wisconsin. Browse by specialty or city. Phone numbers visible on every listing. Call directly, no middleman.

What brings you here?

Pick the one that sounds closest. We will connect you with a surveyor in Milwaukee County.

Filter:All (21)Topographic Survey (3)
21 surveyors in Milwaukee County
Milwaukee County Surveyor Guide

How to hire a land surveyor in Milwaukee County, WI

Updated for 2026 · 4 min read

Licensed Land Surveyors in Milwaukee County

Milwaukee County has a large concentration of licensed Professional Land Surveyors relative to its size, reflecting the county's high level of real estate activity and dense development. The county's municipalities, including Milwaukee, Wauwatosa, West Allis, Greenfield, Shorewood, Cudahy, and South Milwaukee, generate continuous demand for boundary surveys, ALTA surveys, and construction-related surveying work.

Every land surveyor in Wisconsin must hold a Professional Land Surveyor (PLS) license from the Wisconsin Department of Safety and Professional Services (DSPS). All surveyors in our Milwaukee County directory are sourced from DSPS licensing records.

What Milwaukee County Surveyors Handle

Milwaukee County surveyors work across a wide range of project types. Residential boundary surveys are common for fence installation, additions and outbuildings near property lines, and neighbor disputes in the county's densely developed neighborhoods. Commercial work includes ALTA/NSPS surveys for commercial real estate transactions in Milwaukee's business districts and Wauwatosa's healthcare and retail corridors.

Properties near the Milwaukee River, Menomonee River, and Kinnickinnic River require elevation certificates when located in FEMA-designated flood zones. Shoreline properties along Lake Michigan in Shorewood and Milwaukee involve specialized knowledge of riparian boundaries and the ordinary high water mark.

Experience With Milwaukee's Land Records

Milwaukee County's land records extend back to the city's founding in the mid-1800s. Many of the city's older neighborhoods have complex plat histories with vacated alleys, consolidated lots, and block-and-lot descriptions from multiple overlapping subdivision plats. A surveyor with regular experience in Milwaukee County knows how to trace these records efficiently at the Milwaukee County Register of Deeds and the City of Milwaukee's permit records.

How to Choose a Surveyor in Milwaukee County

When requesting quotes, describe the project in detail: address, lot size, what you need the survey for, and any known complications such as neighboring disputes or waterfront frontage. Ask whether the surveyor has worked in your specific municipality recently, as familiarity with local permit requirements and record systems saves time.

Get at least two quotes for any project over $500. Milwaukee County's surveying market is competitive, and prices can vary by 30 percent or more between firms depending on their current workload and specialization.

Find licensed surveyors serving all of Milwaukee County through our Milwaukee County land surveyor directory.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I find a licensed land surveyor in Milwaukee County?

Browse our Milwaukee County land surveyor directory to find licensed surveyors serving Milwaukee, Wauwatosa, West Allis, Greenfield, Shorewood, and surrounding municipalities. All listed surveyors hold valid Wisconsin DSPS credentials.

What survey projects are most common in Milwaukee County?

Boundary surveys for fence installation and permit compliance, ALTA/NSPS surveys for commercial transactions, Certified Survey Maps for lot divisions, elevation certificates for properties near the Milwaukee River and Lake Michigan, and construction staking for residential additions are the most common projects in Milwaukee County.

How long does a survey take in Milwaukee County?

Most residential boundary surveys in Milwaukee County take one to three weeks. ALTA surveys and complex commercial projects can take three to six weeks. Contact surveyors several weeks ahead of any permit or closing deadline, especially during spring and summer.

Sources

  1. Wisconsin DSPS - Professional Land Surveying
  2. Wisconsin Statutes Chapter 443 - Professional Land Surveying
  3. Milwaukee County Government