I'm just a slacker Missourian. Why would the buyer pay for a survey if it's in question???
I asked that same question and was told someone would buy it anyway, so why should the seller pay?
Bruce
I'm just a slacker Missourian. Why would the buyer pay for a survey if it's in question???
Depends on where the property and the local laws. In Texas your property is either part of an legally incorporated area (such as sub-division or in a city limits) or in an unincorporated zone (i.e. rural area). If you are in an unincorporated area, you have to have a boundary survey for a transfer of title.
I asked that same question and was told someone would buy it anyway, so why should the seller pay?
Bruce
OP didn't really say why he was shopping for surveys. Chances are the legal description reads something like 'the NE 1/4 and the SE 1/4 of the SW 1/4 of section 16 of'… Perfectly legit unless the county engineer requires a new survey, which may be the case.Someone will buy land without a legal description??? Okay,,, maybe,,,, if the buyer negotiates the cost of the survey into the buying price. In that case, I get it.
OP didn't really say why he was shopping for surveys. Chances are the legal description reads something like 'the NE 1/4 and the SE 1/4 of the SW 1/4 of section 16 of' Perfectly legit unless the county engineer requires a new survey, which may be the case.
Thoughts on price - reasonableI am looking at an 80 acre parcel (two square 40's) to purchase. I was quoted $1,650 to survey the property. Scope of work:
Tie into the necessary section corners in order to calculate the boundary.
Set ス iron rods with my survey caps or verify existing irons at the boundary corners.
Raise the boundary corners with 4 foot wooden lath and flagging.
Mark the west boundary line with 4 foot wooden lath and flagging spacing approximately every 100-200 feet (I will make sure they are intervisible).
Place a few 4 foot wooden lath with flagging along the north and east boundary lines.
Provide you a certified survey showing the results of the survey.
I have attached a photo. This seems quite reasonable to me. Thoughts?
Depends on your location. We've paid about $1,000 to $1500 for rural parcels in Mississippi on the order of 80 to 100 acres. Last year I think I paid about $1500 for an intown lot in Northern Virginia.
/edit - Mississippi had minimal marking, Virginia had 4 corner posts on a half acre lot. On the Virginia half acre they deployed 2 trucks and four people for about an hour.
Well I thought I pretty well knew where the corners were in my Virginia lot. Until they marked it :
View attachment 391984
On the left is my neighbors, on the right is my property
My survey and a subsequent survey showed that when the county put in the driveway apron they shifted the line well onto my land. My neighbor on the left was about to put in a concrete driveway going straight back from the pink flag and bordering the wooden well cover you see in the back. He was going to effectively go straight back from the concrete apron and a little wider.
After he got his survey he changed his mind.
My parents bought 20 acres (so they thought) in Vermont in 1963, fully fenced but not surveyed. When they went to sell it in 1980 and had it surveyed it had grown to a little over 30 acres.