Buying Acreage? Start With a Property Survey

Buying acreage is not the same as buying a house in a subdivision. When you purchase rural land around Bowling Green, Kentucky, you often deal with old deeds, missing boundary markers, and property lines that no one has physically confirmed in decades. A property survey done before closing gives you an accurate, legally documented picture of exactly what you’re buying. It protects you from problems that can be expensive and difficult to fix after ownership transfers.
This article covers what makes acreage purchases unique, what a survey reveals on rural land, what type of survey fits your situation, and what you risk by skipping one.
Why Acreage Is Different From a Residential Lot
Most subdivision lots have a recorded plat on file and a survey completed within the last few years. Rural acreage in Warren County and surrounding South Central Kentucky is often a different story.
Older parcels may have deed descriptions that reference landmarks no longer there, like a fence post, a creek bank, or a tree. Corner markers may have been removed or buried. Some rural tracts have never been formally surveyed, or were surveyed with equipment far less precise than the GPS and robotic total stations used today.
A larger perimeter means more places for problems to hide. Encroachments, easements, and access issues that would be easy to spot on a small city lot can go unnoticed on a 50-acre wooded parcel until after you close.
What a Property Survey Uncovers on Rural Land
A boundary survey does more than draw lines on a map. For acreage buyers, it documents several things that can directly affect how you use the land and what it’s worth.
Exact Boundary Lines and Actual Acreage
The survey confirms where your property lines actually sit, using recorded deeds, plat records, and physical fieldwork. It also verifies the total acreage. Discrepancies between the advertised acreage and the surveyed acreage are not rare on older rural parcels, and the difference affects value and what you can develop.
Encroachments
An encroachment happens when something crosses a property line. That could be a neighbor’s fence built a few feet inside your boundary, a shared driveway, or an outbuilding placed too close to the edge. Some encroachments are old and well-established. Others are recent. Either way, they create legal exposure after closing. Finding them before you buy gives you the chance to negotiate a resolution with the seller.
Easements and Access Rights
Easements give someone else legal rights to use part of your land. Common examples on rural parcels include utility easements for power lines and pipelines, road easements that allow a neighbor to cross your land to reach theirs, and drainage easements. These rights don’t disappear when ownership changes. A survey shows where easements run so you know what comes with the property before you agree to buy it.
Access matters for another reason too. Some rural parcels have no direct frontage on a public road. They rely on an easement across neighboring land to reach the highway. If that easement isn’t properly documented, you may have trouble getting financing or selling the property later.
Flood Zone Considerations
Acreage near rivers, creeks, or low-lying terrain in Warren County can carry flood zone designations that affect what you can build and how much you pay for insurance. A survey can include elevation analysis and flood zone data, which is especially relevant for parcels near the Barren River or Gasper River.
According to the American Land Title Association, boundary-related problems, including encroachments and easements, show up in more than 20 percent of residential real estate sales. The rate is higher on rural acreage, where surveys are updated less often.
Which Type of Survey Do You Need?
The right survey depends on what you’re buying and what you plan to do with it.
Boundary Survey
A boundary survey identifies and marks your property corners and perimeter lines using deed records and field measurements. For most residential and recreational acreage buyers, this is the standard starting point. In Kentucky, costs typically run from $450 to $1,500, depending on acreage, terrain, and how complete the existing records are. Wooded or hilly land takes more time than open, flat ground.
Topographic Survey
A topographic survey maps the elevation and physical features of the land, including structures, trees, waterways, and utility lines. If you’re planning to build on the acreage, your architect or engineer will likely need this data before they can design anything. Expect to pay $1,500 to $3,000 or more for larger parcels.
ALTA/NSPS Survey
The ALTA/NSPS survey is the most detailed type available. It meets nationally standardized requirements from the American Land Title Association and the National Society of Professional Surveyors. It covers boundaries, easements, improvements, access, encroachments, and title-related matters in one document. Lenders commonly require this type for commercial transactions. Costs generally run from $2,000 to $5,000 or more, depending on acreage and complexity.
What Buyers Discover After Closing Without a Survey
Skipping a property survey to save money is one of the more common mistakes acreage buyers make. Here’s what tends to surface after the fact:
- Boundary lines that don’t match where the seller described them, sometimes by significant distances
- Neighbor encroachments that were there all along but never documented
- Utility easements running directly through a planned building site
- No deeded road access, making financing and resale difficult
- Actual acreage that falls short of what was advertised in the listing
- Flood zone status that raises insurance costs or restricts what can be built
How Long Does an Acreage Survey Take?
Most boundary surveys for rural parcels take two to six weeks from scheduling to delivery. Complex parcels, those with unclear records, dense terrain, or large acreage, can take eight to twelve weeks. Build that timeline into your due diligence period before closing.
A few things affect how long the process takes:
- Parcel size: more acreage means more fieldwork
- Terrain: dense woods and steep land slow the crew down
- Record gaps: older deeds and missing markers require more research
- Surveyor availability: rural counties have a smaller pool of licensed professionals
In Kentucky, only a licensed professional land surveyor can produce a survey that holds up legally. When you’re scheduling, ask about turnaround time and confirm the completed survey will meet your title company’s requirements before the closing date.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does an existing survey on file mean I don’t need a new one?
Not necessarily. If the existing survey is recent and the parcel hasn’t changed, your title company may accept it. But if the survey is more than a few years old, or if structures have been added or the parcel has been altered, a new survey is often required. A licensed surveyor can review what’s on file and advise you.
Who pays for the survey?
In Kentucky, the buyer typically pays for the survey. This can sometimes be negotiated with the seller, especially if they have a recent survey already completed. Confirm the arrangement in writing before closing.
What happens if the survey turns up a problem?
Finding a problem before closing is far better than finding it after. Common options include renegotiating the purchase price, requiring the seller to resolve encroachments before closing, adjusting the acreage and price if the boundaries differ from the deed, or walking away from the deal entirely. Your real estate attorney can help you decide the best path.
Can I use county GIS maps to check my boundaries?
County GIS maps are useful for a general overview, but they aren’t legally recognized surveys. They can contain errors and don’t reflect the field investigation and record research that a licensed surveyor performs. They’re a starting point for research, not a substitute for a survey.
