
You’re three weeks from breaking ground. Your engineer asks for the survey mapping package. You call your surveyor. He asks which maps you need. You don’t know.
This happens more than it should. Survey mapping covers a range of documents, and each one gets used at a different stage of a project. Asking for “a survey” without specifying the right map type is like ordering “food” at a restaurant. You’ll get something. Just not necessarily what you needed.
Here’s what survey mapping actually means and when each type is required.
What Is Survey Mapping?
Survey mapping is the process of collecting field measurements and turning them into scaled, certified drawings that document the physical characteristics of a piece of land.
A survey is the act of measuring. A survey map is the finished product. Surveyors go into the field, collect data on boundaries, elevations, structures and utilities, then compile that data into maps that engineers, developers, permit offices and lenders can use.
Survey maps are legal documents. They’re prepared by licensed surveyors, carry a professional stamp and certification, and become part of the permanent record for a property.
Not all survey maps show the same things. The type of map you need depends entirely on what stage of development you’re in and what decision needs to be made.
Types of Survey Maps Used in Development
Cadastral and Ownership Maps
Cadastral maps show who owns what. They define property boundaries, lot dimensions and legal descriptions. These maps document the legal extent of a parcel and are used when buying land, resolving ownership questions or confirming that a property’s boundaries match the recorded deed.
County tax records and recorded plats are forms of cadastral mapping. When a developer needs to confirm the exact legal limits of a site before acquisition, a cadastral survey map is the starting point.
Construction Survey Maps
Construction survey maps guide what gets built and where. After design is complete, surveyors translate the engineer’s plans onto the ground and produce maps showing control points, stake locations, grade elevations and alignment data.
These maps don’t just get filed away. Field crews use them every day. They show where structures go, where grades need to meet design elevations and where underground utilities should be installed. A construction survey map is a working document.
Site Plan Survey Maps
Local governments require a site plan survey map as part of most permit applications for new construction, additions or major site work. This map shows the existing conditions of the property along with proposed improvements, set against the recorded boundaries.
Permit offices use it to confirm setback compliance, verify access requirements and check that proposed work stays within the legal property lines. Without it, a permit application stalls at the counter.
When Survey Mapping Is Required
Before You Buy
A survey map before closing confirms that property boundaries match the deed, that no encroachments exist from neighboring properties and that the parcel is configured the way the seller says it is.
Skipping this step is a real risk. Boundary disputes and encroachments that existed before closing become the buyer’s problem the moment the deed is signed.
During Permitting
Most local governments require at least one type of survey map before issuing a development permit. Common requirements include a boundary survey map, an existing conditions map or a location sketch showing the property in relation to public roads and adjacent lots.
Requirements vary by county and project type. A single-family addition may need only a simple location survey. A commercial project on a larger parcel may need a full boundary survey map package before the first permit is approved.
During Construction
Construction survey mapping happens in phases. Early in the project, surveyors establish horizontal and vertical control for the entire site. As work progresses, they produce maps showing as-placed conditions for foundations, utilities and site improvements.
These maps catch errors before they become expensive. A foundation poured in the wrong location is a very different problem before or after the concrete is set.
At Project Closeout
Most jurisdictions require a final survey map before issuing a certificate of occupancy. This document confirms that finished construction matches the approved plans and sits within required setbacks and easements.
Lenders also require a final survey map before releasing retainage on construction loans. Title companies need it to insure the completed project.
What a Survey Map Contains
Regardless of type, most survey maps include:
- A scale indicator and north arrow
- The surveyor’s certification and license number
- Property boundary lines with bearings and distances
- Existing structures, improvements and visible utilities
- Easements and right-of-way lines
- Lot area and dimensions
- Reference to the deed description or recorded plat
Construction survey maps add control point data, staking information and grade callouts. Site plan maps add proposed improvement layouts, setback dimensions and access measurements.
Survey Mapping vs. Raw Survey Data
A surveyor collects far more data in the field than what appears on the final map. GPS coordinates, elevation readings and boundary measurements all go into the project file.
The survey map is a curated, certified selection of that data, organized for a specific purpose and audience. A construction survey map and a cadastral map of the same property may draw from the same field measurements but look completely different and serve entirely different functions.
This is why ordering the right map type from the start matters. The wrong map delays the project even when the field work is already done.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between a survey and a survey map?
A survey is the process of measuring land, boundaries and physical features in the field. A survey map is the finished drawing produced from that data. The survey happens first. The map is what gets certified, stamped and submitted to permit offices, lenders or county recorders.
Who is qualified to produce a survey map?
Only a licensed land surveyor can certify a survey map. In Florida, surveyors must hold an active Professional Surveyor and Mapper (PSM) license issued by the state. The license number and professional stamp on the map confirm its legal validity.
Are survey maps public records?
Some survey maps, such as recorded plats and subdivision maps, are public records filed with the county. Others, such as construction survey maps and site plan survey maps, are submitted to permit offices but may not be publicly recorded. Check with the county recorder’s office to confirm what’s on file for a specific property.
How long does it take to produce a survey map?
Timelines vary by complexity. A simple boundary or location survey map for a small parcel may take one to two weeks. A full site survey mapping package for a large development can take four to six weeks or longer when title research, field work and drafting are all included. Get a written timeline before committing to a project schedule.
Does survey mapping need to be updated for every new project on the same property?
Existing survey maps can sometimes be reused if conditions haven’t changed. More often, a new survey is required when physical conditions have changed, when more than a year has passed or when the permit office or lender requires a current certification date. Confirm requirements with the relevant authority before assuming an older map is still acceptable.
