
Reviewed June 2026 by the FrontierAcre team
The straight answer on who pays, what a survey costs, and whether you even need one to sell. Custom varies by region and it is usually negotiable.
There is no single national rule on who pays for a land survey. It is customary, negotiable, and on a direct cash sale it is just written into the agreement. Here is how it actually works.
By common custom, the party who wants the survey pays for it, which is often the buyer, since they want certainty on the boundaries. In some regions the seller is expected to provide a current survey. Neither is a law. On a cash land purchase, the buyer and seller simply agree it in the contract, and a direct buyer will often cover it.
A boundary survey on a typical parcel runs from a few hundred dollars to a couple of thousand, driven by acreage, terrain, access and how current the existing records are. Large, remote or wooded tracts cost more because the work is harder.
Often not. Many land sales close on the recorded legal description plus a title company's search. A new survey is mainly needed when the boundaries are unclear or disputed, when there is no usable existing survey, or when a buyer or lender requires it. When you sell to a cash buyer, the title company confirms what is needed.
Pricing, the full process, and the direct route.
What owners ask about surveys when selling.
It is negotiable and varies by region. By custom the buyer often pays for a survey they request, but in some areas the seller pays, and on a cash land sale it is simply agreed in the contract. You do not always need a new survey to sell.
For most parcels a boundary survey runs a few hundred to a couple of thousand dollars depending on acreage, terrain and how old the existing records are. Large or heavily wooded tracts cost more.
Not always. Many land sales close on the existing legal description and a title search without a new survey. A survey is mainly needed when boundaries are unclear, disputed, or a lender or buyer requires one.
A boundary survey marks the property lines. An ALTA survey is a detailed survey to a national standard, common in commercial deals, showing improvements, easements and encroachments. Most raw land sales need at most a boundary survey.
Answer a few quick questions, add a photo or plat if you have one, and we come back with a written, no obligation cash offer, usually within one working day.
A few quick steps. Parcel, size, location, a photo if you have one, then where to send the offer.