Welcome to Decatur Land Surveying

Welcome to Decatur Land Surveying

This site is intended to provide you with information on Land Surveying in the Decatur, AL and Morgan & Limestone Counties area of Alabama. If you’re looking for a Decatur Land Surveyor, you’ve come to the right place. If you’d rather talk to someone about your land surveying needs, please call our local number at (256) 445-8450 today. For more information, please continue to read.

Decatur land surveyingLand Surveyors are professionals who make precise measurements to determine the size and boundaries of a piece of real estate.  While this is a simplistic definition, boundary surveying is one of the most common types of surveying related to home and land owners. If you fall into the following categories, please click on the appropriate link for more information on that subject:

Decatur Land Surveying services:

    1. I need to know where my property corners or property lines are. (Boundary Survey)
    2. I have a loan closing or re-finance coming up on my home in a subdivision. (Lot Survey)
    3. I need a map of my property with contour lines to show elevation differences for my architect or engineer. (Topo Survey)
    4. I’ve just been told I’m in a flood zone or I’ve been told I need an elevation certificate in order to obtain flood insurance or prove I don’t need it. (Flood Survey)
    5. I’m purchasing a lot/house in a recorded subdivision. (Lot Survey – See Boundary Survey)
    6. I’m purchasing a larger tract of land, acreage, that hasn’t been subdivided in the past. (Boundary Survey)

Contact Decatur Land Surveying services TODAY at (256) 445-8450.

LiDAR Mapping Explained: What It Is and How It Works

Surveyor using LiDAR mapping equipment and a drone to capture terrain data for a land development project.

Most people have never heard of LiDAR mapping until they need it. Then they need it badly. Developers, engineers and surveyors use it to get elevation data, terrain models and surface measurements that traditional methods can’t match for speed or detail. This article breaks down what LiDAR mapping is, how it works and where it fits into real-world projects.

The Technology Behind the Name

LiDAR stands for Light Detection and Ranging. It’s a remote sensing method that uses laser pulses to measure distances between a sensor and the ground below. Those measurements get processed into highly accurate three-dimensional models of terrain, structures and surfaces.

The output is called a point cloud. Imagine millions of individual data points, each one representing a precise location in three-dimensional space. When those points are stitched together, you get a detailed picture of whatever the laser scanned.

Drone LiDAR is not photography. It doesn’t capture color or texture the way a camera does. It captures geometry. That distinction matters a lot when you’re planning a construction project or assessing land for development.

From Laser Pulse to 3D Model

A LiDAR system fires laser pulses at a surface. Each pulse travels to the target, bounces back and returns to the sensor. The system measures how long that round trip takes. Since light travels at a known speed, the system calculates the exact distance to that point.

This happens thousands of times per second. A single pass over a project area can generate hundreds of millions of data points. The result is a dense, accurate model of everything the laser hit.

Most LiDAR systems also record multiple returns from a single pulse. When a laser hits a tree, it might bounce off a leaf first, then a branch, then the ground below. Each return gets recorded separately. This is how LiDAR can see through vegetation to capture the bare ground underneath, which is something aerial photography simply cannot do.

What Comes Out of a LiDAR Survey

Raw LiDAR data gets processed into several deliverables depending on what the project needs.

A Digital Elevation Model (DEM) shows bare-earth terrain after vegetation and structures have been filtered out. It’s the go-to product for flood analysis, grading plans and drainage studies.

A Digital Surface Model (DSM) includes everything the laser hit, including trees, buildings and other features above ground. It gives you a picture of the surface as it exists, not just the ground beneath it.

A Digital Terrain Model (DTM) is similar to a DEM but often includes additional breaklines and contours manually added by a surveyor to improve accuracy in critical areas.

Contour maps are generated directly from LiDAR data and used in site planning, civil engineering and construction documents.

Point clouds themselves are sometimes delivered directly to clients for use in design software.

Where LiDAR Makes the Most Sense for Developers

LiDAR isn’t the right tool for every job. For a small residential lot, a traditional ground survey is faster and cheaper. But for larger, more complex projects, LiDAR saves significant time and money.

It performs well on large tracts of undeveloped land where ground crews would take weeks to cover the same area. Heavily wooded sites benefit from LiDAR’s ability to filter vegetation and expose the ground below. Projects near waterways or in flood-prone areas use LiDAR elevation data to feed hydraulic models and support permitting.

In Decatur and across northern Alabama, land development along river corridors and in floodplain areas makes LiDAR particularly useful for accurate elevation data and drainage planning.

Numbers Worth Knowing

Modern airborne LiDAR systems can collect between 200,000 and over one million points per second depending on the sensor.

Typical accuracy for airborne LiDAR in open terrain is 10 to 15 centimeters vertically. Ground-based systems can achieve accuracy under one centimeter.

The United States Geological Survey (USGS) 3D Elevation Program (3DEP) has collected LiDAR data covering more than 80 percent of the contiguous United States.

LiDAR point density for standard topographic mapping is typically two to eight points per square meter. High-density collections can exceed 20 points per square meter.

Alabama has LiDAR coverage available through the USGS 3DEP program, with varying resolution depending on the county and collection year.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is LiDAR mapping and what is it used for?

LiDAR mapping is a remote sensing method that uses laser pulses to measure distances and create three-dimensional models of terrain and surfaces. Developers and engineers use it for site analysis, flood modeling, terrain mapping and construction planning on projects where traditional ground surveys would be too slow or costly.

How accurate is LiDAR survey data?

Accuracy depends on the system type and collection method. Airborne LiDAR typically achieves vertical accuracy of 10 to 15 centimeters in open terrain. Ground-based terrestrial LiDAR can achieve accuracy under one centimeter. Project specifications and intended use determine which accuracy level is needed.

What is a point cloud in LiDAR?

A point cloud is the raw output of a LiDAR scan. It’s a collection of millions of individual data points, each with a precise three-dimensional coordinate. Point clouds are processed into elevation models, contour maps and other survey products used in engineering and planning.

Can LiDAR see through trees and vegetation?

Yes. Because LiDAR records multiple returns from a single laser pulse, it can capture the ground surface beneath a tree canopy. The first return hits the top of the vegetation and later returns penetrate to the ground below. This makes LiDAR useful on wooded sites where aerial photography can’t capture bare-earth elevations.

How is LiDAR different from traditional land surveying?

Traditional ground surveys use direct measurement by a field crew. LiDAR collects data remotely using laser pulses, covering large areas much faster. Ground surveys are more precise for individual points and legal boundary work. LiDAR excels at large-area terrain modeling, volumetric analysis and projects where speed and coverage matter more than individual point precision.

How to Find Property Lines the Right Way

Aerial view of neighboring homes with property lines highlighted to show lot boundaries

Most homeowners go years without thinking about where their property actually ends. Then something changes. A neighbor starts putting up a fence. A contractor asks for a site plan before pulling a permit. A disagreement comes up over a tree that sits right on the edge of the yard. Suddenly, knowing the exact boundary line feels urgent.

The good news is that there are several ways to get a reasonable picture of where your property lines are. Each method has its strengths, and each has its limits. Knowing the difference helps you avoid making decisions based on information that is not accurate enough to rely on.

Start With Your Deed

Your property deed contains a written legal description of your land’s boundaries. It is the first place to look and the foundation for everything else.

Every property has a deed on file with the local government. That deed describes the boundaries using measurements, directions, and sometimes references to neighboring properties or landmarks. Reading it gives you a starting point even if the language takes some effort to interpret.

Where to find your deed:

  • Your county recorder, register of deeds, or clerk of court office
  • Your county’s online public records portal
  • The title company that handled your home purchase
  • Your mortgage closing documents

Older deeds can be especially difficult to read. Some use landmarks that no longer exist or language that requires experience to interpret correctly. Even so, reviewing your deed before taking any other steps is always worth the time.

Check Your County GIS Map

Most counties in the United States maintain a GIS map that shows property boundaries overlaid on aerial imagery. These maps are free, available online, and give you a visual reference for where your lot lines fall in relation to your neighbors.

GIS stands for Geographic Information System. County GIS maps show parcel boundaries, lot dimensions, and sometimes structure footprints. You can usually search by address and zoom in to see your property in detail.

The important thing to understand is that GIS maps are for general reference only. The lines shown on screen can be off by several feet from the actual legal boundary. They are a helpful starting point but not a document you can rely on for construction, fencing, or legal matters.

To find your county’s GIS map, search your county name followed by “GIS parcel map” or “property search” online.

Look for Physical Corner Markers

If your property was surveyed at some point, corner markers were placed at the boundary corners of your lot. These are typically iron rods or pipes driven into the ground, sometimes with a plastic cap stamped with the surveyor’s license number.

Finding these markers gives you a physical reference point for your boundaries. The challenge is that they can be difficult to locate. Soil, grass, and landscaping grow over them. Construction work sometimes disturbs or removes them. In some cases they were never found during a prior transaction and simply went unnoticed.

A basic metal detector can help you locate buried iron pins. Once you find one corner, you have a confirmed starting point. Locating multiple corners gives you a clearer picture of the full boundary.

It is worth knowing that moving or removing a corner marker is a criminal offense in most states. These monuments carry legal significance and are protected under state surveying laws.

Pull the Recorded Plat

If your property is part of a subdivision, a plat was recorded when the subdivision was created. A plat is a drawn map that shows individual lots with their dimensions and boundaries laid out to scale. It is one of the most useful documents for understanding your property lines without hiring anyone.

Recorded plats are public documents. You can find them at your county recorder or register of deeds office, through your county’s online document search portal, or from the title company that handled your closing.

Keep in mind that a plat reflects the boundaries as they were drawn when the subdivision was originally created. It does not account for changes that may have occurred since then, and it is not a substitute for a current survey when precision is required.

Use an Online Property Line Tool

Several websites and mobile apps now display property boundary overlays using publicly available parcel data. These tools pull from the same county GIS databases and show boundary lines on a map you can view from your phone or computer.

They are convenient for a quick visual check. They carry the same limitations as county GIS maps though. The data is not legally precise, it is not always current, and it should not be used for making decisions about construction, fencing, or disputes.

What These Methods Cannot Do

All four approaches above give you useful information. None of them give you a legally certified answer.

County GIS maps, deeds, plats, and online tools help you understand your general boundaries. They are research tools. They are not legal documents that establish where your boundary line officially sits.

Only a licensed land surveyor can establish and certify property lines with legal authority. A surveyor’s findings are documented in a way that holds up in court. A screenshot from a GIS map does not.

If you are planning to build a fence, add a structure, resolve a dispute with a neighbor, or complete a real estate transaction, a licensed surveyor is the only professional whose determination of your property line carries legal weight.

Why Does a Land Survey Cost So Much? 

Surveyor reviewing property records and survey plans to prepare a property boundary survey and determine land survey cost

When homeowners get a quote for a land survey and it comes in higher than expected, the first reaction is usually frustration. The assumption is that surveyors are overcharging for something that looks simple. That assumption is almost always wrong.

Land surveying involves far more than walking a property with equipment. Before a surveyor ever arrives on site, hours of research, record pulling, and planning have already taken place. Understanding what goes into the work makes the price make a lot more sense.

What Is the Average Land Survey Cost?

A standard residential boundary survey costs between $400 and $1,000 in most parts of the United States. Specialty surveys cost significantly more, often ranging from $1,500 to $5,000 or higher depending on complexity and location.

Survey TypeTypical Cost Range
Mortgage/Location Survey$300 to $700
Boundary Survey$400 to $1,000
Topographic Survey$500 to $1,200
As-Built Survey$700 to $1,500
Construction Survey$1,000 to $2,500
ALTA/NSPS Survey$2,000 to $5,000+

These are national averages. Prices in rural Alabama and other less populated areas may differ from larger cities due to local overhead, demand, and travel time.

What You Are Actually Paying For

Most people picture a surveyor walking around with a tripod for an hour or two. That fieldwork is only one part of the job. A land survey cost covers the entire process from start to finish.

Here is what goes into a typical survey:

  • Research and record review. Before fieldwork begins, the surveyor pulls deeds, recorded plats, and prior surveys from county records. This step alone can take several hours on older or complicated properties.
  • Field crew time. This includes travel to the site, equipment setup, taking measurements, and locating monuments or corner markers.
  • Equipment use. GPS units, total stations, and data collectors are expensive tools that require regular maintenance and calibration.
  • Office processing. After fieldwork, the surveyor calculates measurements, resolves any conflicts found in the records, and drafts the final plat.
  • Professional certification. A licensed land surveyor’s signature and seal give the document legal standing. That credential comes with years of education, field experience, and a licensing exam.
  • Professional liability insurance. Surveyors carry insurance that protects property owners if an error occurs. That coverage is factored into the cost of every job.

When you pay for a land survey, you are paying for a legally defensible document that can hold up in court. That is worth more than a few hours of field time.

What Drives the Cost Higher

Property Size

Larger properties take more time to measure and more fieldwork to complete accurately. A small subdivision lot is much faster to survey than a multi-acre rural tract with irregular boundaries. Most surveyors base their pricing on time and complexity, so bigger almost always means more expensive.

Terrain and Vegetation

A flat, open lot is straightforward to survey. A heavily wooded property, a hillside, or land near water creates real challenges. Thick vegetation blocks line-of-sight equipment readings. Uneven terrain requires additional setups and measurements to get accurate results. These conditions add hours to the job.

Age and Condition of Existing Records

Older properties with incomplete or poorly written deed descriptions require more research before fieldwork can begin. This additional office work is a legitimate part of what drives land survey costs higher, and it is often the factor homeowners least expect.

Properties that have never been surveyed before, or that were last surveyed decades ago, take longer to research. Deeds written in older formats, like metes and bounds descriptions using landmarks that no longer exist, require extra time to interpret and verify.

Missing or Destroyed Corner Markers

Corner markers are physical monuments placed in the ground to mark the boundaries of a property. When they are missing, buried, or destroyed, the surveyor cannot simply observe and record them. Instead, the boundaries must be located through research, calculation, and sometimes coordination with neighboring property records.

Re-establishing missing corners takes real expertise and adds measurable time to the job. It is one of the most common reasons a survey comes in higher than a homeowner expected.

The Type of Survey Required

Not all surveys serve the same purpose, and the differences in scope affect the price significantly. A mortgage survey provides a general location overview and is the least involved. A boundary survey is more precise and legally detailed. An ALTA/NSPS survey, which is typically required for commercial real estate transactions, is the most thorough and therefore the most expensive.

Paying for a survey type that does not match your actual need wastes money. Paying for one that falls short of what your situation requires can create problems down the road.

Location and Travel Time

Surveyors working in rural or remote areas often factor travel into their pricing. If your property is far from where the survey crew is based, that time and fuel cost gets reflected in the quote. A surveyor who already operates in your county or region will generally be more efficient and more competitive on price for local work.

Why Two Quotes Can Look Very Different

It is not unusual to get two quotes for the same property and see a significant difference between them. Several things explain this.

One surveyor may already have data from nearby surveys on file, which cuts down on research time. Another may be less familiar with the area and needs to start from scratch. One firm may include a stamped plat in the base price while another treats it as a separate charge. Experience level, crew size, and overhead costs also vary between companies.

Getting two or three quotes before hiring is a reasonable way to understand the local range. A quote that comes in very low deserves the same scrutiny as one that comes in very high.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why did my neighbor pay less for what sounds like the same survey? 

Several factors could explain the difference. Their lot may be smaller, flatter, or easier to research. A recent nearby survey may have already established some of the boundary points. Prices also change over time, so surveys completed years apart will reflect different rates.

Does the land survey cost include a copy of the plat? 

Not always. Some surveyors include a certified plat as part of their standard fee. Others charge separately for a stamped or recorded copy. Asking about this before signing any agreement avoids surprises at the end.

Is a lower-priced survey less accurate? 

Price alone does not determine accuracy. A licensed surveyor who is familiar with your area and charges less than a competitor can produce work that is just as accurate. What matters most is that the surveyor holds a valid state license and carries professional liability insurance.

Does providing an old survey lower the cost? 

It can. Sharing any existing surveys, deeds, or plats with the surveyor before work begins reduces the time spent on research. Less research time can translate directly into a lower quote.