How a Commercial Survey Uncovers Hidden Easements and Risks
Some of the most expensive problems in commercial real estate were never visible during the walkthrough. They were buried in old deed records, sitting inside easement corridors nobody flagged, or hiding behind boundary lines that hadn’t been checked in decades. By the time they surface, the deal is closed and the cost falls on whoever signed it.
A commercial survey finds those problems before closing. For developers putting serious money into commercial acquisitions, skipping it is one of the riskier calls you can make.
What a Commercial Survey Includes
A commercial survey does more than confirm property lines. It documents the legal and physical condition of the entire parcel. That includes boundaries, easements, encroachments, utility corridors and access restrictions.
The standard used for most commercial transactions is the ALTA/NSPS Land Title Survey. Lenders and title companies accept it because it covers details that a basic boundary survey leaves out.
The survey draws from two sources: public records and physical fieldwork. Records show what’s been legally filed against the property. Fieldwork shows what’s actually on the ground. Those two things don’t always match.
Why Easements Are Often Overlooked
An easement gives another party the legal right to use part of your property for a specific purpose. Utility companies hold them for power lines and sewer pipes. Government agencies hold them for drainage and road widening. Private parties hold them for shared driveways and access paths.
Easements transfer automatically when a property sells. The new owner inherits all of them, whether or not anyone mentioned them during the sale.
The problem is that easements aren’t always easy to find. Some were recorded decades ago and never reflected on a current map. A commercial survey identifies where those corridors sit on the ground, how wide they are and what restrictions they carry.
An easement running through the center of a planned building footprint doesn’t just complicate construction. It can stop it entirely.
Common Risks a Commercial Survey Can Reveal
Easements are the most common issue, but not the only one. Here is what a commercial survey regularly turns up.
Encroachments From Neighboring Properties
An encroachment happens when a structure from a neighboring property crosses onto yours. Fences, walls and driveways are the most common examples. If you buy the property without knowing an encroachment exists, you’ve bought the problem too. Fixing it after closing usually means negotiating with a neighbor who has no reason to cooperate, or going to court.
Access and Ingress Issues
Some commercial parcels look accessible on paper but have no legal access to a public road. This happens with flag lots and landlocked parcels. A survey confirms whether legal access actually exists. If it doesn’t, that’s not a minor detail. It’s a deal-stopper.
Boundary Conflicts and Deed Discrepancies
A deed describes a property using words and measurements. When those measurements get plotted on the ground, they don’t always match what the buyer expected. Gaps and overlaps between neighboring parcels are common, especially on older properties that have changed hands many times.
Unrecorded Utility Lines
Not every utility line crossing a property has a recorded easement behind it. Some were installed informally years ago. A field crew walking the site can find physical signs of those lines even when the records show nothing.
What Happens When You Skip the Survey
Standard title insurance policies contain a survey exception. That means they don’t cover losses that a proper survey would have found. To remove that exception, the title company needs a current certified survey.
Many developers close without one and assume their title policy covers everything. It doesn’t. That survey exception sits inside the policy and most won’t know it’s there until they file a claim and get denied.
When to Order a Commercial Survey
Order it early in due diligence. You want results before you lock in a purchase price, before permit applications go out and well before any closing deadline shows up.
If the survey finds a problem, you have three options: negotiate a lower price, require the seller to fix the issue before closing, or walk away. All three require time. Ordering the survey late takes that time away.
For projects with multiple parcels or phased development, the survey also works as a planning document. It shows what you own and what restrictions apply before your design team starts work.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a commercial survey and what does it include?
A commercial survey documents the boundaries, easements, encroachments, access rights and physical features of a commercial property. Most transactions use the ALTA/NSPS Land Title Survey standard, which requires both public records research and on-site fieldwork to produce a property map that lenders and title companies will accept.
How does a commercial survey find easements that a title search misses?
A title search reviews recorded documents. A survey takes those documents and maps them onto the ground. Easements written in old deed language don’t always translate into a clear physical location. A licensed surveyor measures and maps where easement corridors actually fall on the parcel, which can reveal problems that records alone won’t show.
Can an easement prevent development on a commercial property?
Yes. If an easement runs through a planned building area or parking structure, it can block that part of the project entirely. Easement holders have legal rights that courts enforce. Finding an easement before closing gives you time to adjust plans or renegotiate the deal.
What is the difference between an encroachment and an easement?
An easement is a legal right to use part of a property for a set purpose. An encroachment is a physical intrusion where a structure crosses a property line without permission. Both show up on a commercial survey. Both create problems if left unresolved before purchase.
How long does a commercial survey take?
A standard ALTA survey for a single commercial parcel typically takes one to three weeks from order to delivery. Larger sites and properties with complicated records take longer. Build the survey into your due diligence timeline from the beginning, not after everything else is already scheduled.
For a free land surveying quote, call us at (954) 516-2680 or send us a message by going here.
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