How to Find an Existing Survey of Property

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A party can obtain a property survey from her local city or county government office that maintains land records. The name of the office varies. For example, in San Francisco, the correct office is the County Assessor-Recorder; in Milwaukee, the correct office is the Milwaukee Permit & Development Center. A property survey may be available from an online database, or from computer terminals at the assessor's office or in paper form in the office’s archives.

The office holding the survey may charge a fee to search for and copy the property survey. Sometimes a property survey is contained in another document, such as an application for a building permit, a will, a deed or a contract.

Read More:How to Find a Property Map

What Is a Property Survey?

A property survey is a document that a licensed surveyor has created to show the boundaries and rights of way on a piece of property. It should look like a detailed sketch of the property and note the easements and zoning of the parcel and the property's legal history.

Purpose of a Property Survey

A mortgage company may require a property survey to verify that the property is worth the amount of money provided in the loan. Neighbors may utilize a property survey to determine who owns or has rights to cross certain portions of the land. A seller should have a property survey to know what she will convey in the sale. An owner who wants to build on the property should have a property survey to be aware of any complications that may arise.

What Information Do I Need?

A party should have the property address or parcel ID, the name of the document for which he is searching, the document number, the document type and the assessor’s parcel number (APN). The APN may be the assessor’s block and lot number.

Who Else Has a Property Survey?

The individuals that facilitated the sale of the property should be able to provide a party with a property survey. These include the seller, real estate agent, lender, title company, attorney and surveyor. A county’s engineering department, building inspector, map room or tax assessor’s office may have a property survey. If a party lives in a city, the city records office may have the document.

A tax assessor may have a property survey if the property is a city lot because the assessor looks at tax maps to find the tax value of a property.

When Records Are Not Current

Whether or not a survey on file with a government office is current depends on state law. Some states, such as California, do not require owners to perform a new survey with every change of ownership. If a property survey is outdated, a party may need to commission a new survey to resolve a dispute.

When There Is No Property Survey

When there is no property survey, a county recorder may have a plat map. A plat map shows a tract of land subdivided into plots. A developer usually creates a plat map before building a subdivision or a neighborhood. A plat map can be used to determine property lines.

Evidence Showing a Property Survey Exists

A surveyor uses physical markers to show the boundaries on a parcel. A party can walk a parcel to look at what markers exist to indicate a survey has taken place. In newer properties, stakes, pipes, markings on concrete and masonry nails in asphalt indicate a surveyor has done a property survey.

In older properties, fences, trees and buildings may be the markers. When these objects or landmarks no longer exist, a property survey that refers to them may be outdated.

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