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Land Surveyors in Bartow County, GA

10 surveyors 3 cities covered Boundary survey $500 to $1,500

Find licensed professional land surveyors in Bartow County, Georgia. Browse by specialty or city. Phone numbers visible on every listing. Call directly, no middleman.

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About this Bartow County page

Bartow County listings are meant to help property owners find firms to contact, compare scope, and confirm availability. Always verify licensing, insurance, price, and project fit before hiring.

Review standards
  • Only private surveying firms and licensed surveying professionals are eligible for listing.
  • Firm websites, public contact details, and owner-submitted corrections are reviewed where available.
  • Georgia license information shown where available
  • Non-surveying entities and government offices are removed when identified.
10 profiles shown
10 local office profiles
0 service-area listings
2 with license info
0 claimed profiles
4 with website data
This area currently has several local firm profiles or explicit nearby service coverage.
Last reviewed: May 16, 2026.
A listing is not an endorsement. Property owners should speak with the firm directly before booking.
Hiring guide for Bartow County

Choose by project fit, not just rating

Bartow County has multiple local options, so compare scope before comparing price. A low price is not useful if it leaves out staking, a signed plat, or records research.

Boundary or fence survey
Ask directly

Ask whether the estimate includes corners marked, lines staked, a signed drawing, and any return visit.

Elevation certificate
Ask directly

Ask whether the firm prepares FEMA elevation certificates and what flood-zone information they need from you.

Topo, grading, or site plan
Ask directly

Ask what CAD or contour deliverable is included, especially for additions, pools, drainage, or engineer design.

Local directory signals
10profiles
10local offices
4websites
2license records

Listings cover 3 local cities in this directory view.

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10 surveyors in Bartow County
Bartow County Surveyor Guide

How to hire a land surveyor in Bartow County, GA

Updated for 2026 · 4 min read

How to find a land surveyor in Bartow County, Georgia

If you need a land surveyor Bartow County Georgia property owners can rely on, start with firms that regularly work in Cartersville, Adairsville, Emerson, Kingston, White, Taylorsville, Rydal, and nearby unincorporated areas. The best match is usually a Georgia Professional Land Surveyor who already knows how Bartow County plats, parcel records, zoning review, and flood-map questions affect real projects. That matters whether you are buying a house, dividing acreage, staking a new home, or preparing a commercial site.

Start with Georgia licensure

In Georgia, land surveying is a licensed profession regulated by the Georgia Professional Engineers and Land Surveyors Board. When you contact a firm, ask who will sign and seal the survey, whether the firm is authorized to practice in Georgia, and whether the job is mostly boundary, topographic, ALTA/NSPS, construction, or subdivision work. That simple screening step filters out a lot of wasted calls.

Match the firm to the property and the deadline

Bartow County has a healthy local base of survey providers, with most listings concentrated in Cartersville and additional coverage in Emerson and Adairsville. Even so, schedules can tighten quickly during spring and summer, around closings, and when builders need staking. If timing matters, ask up front about fieldwork availability, courthouse research time, and final deliverables.

Why local survey experience matters

Bartow County is not a one-pattern market. The county's population was estimated at 120,800 in 2025, up from 108,901 at the 2020 Census, and that growth shows up in new subdivisions, commercial sites, road frontage questions, and redevelopment pressure across the county. Official economic development materials also describe Bartow County as north of Atlanta on Interstate 75, which helps explain why survey demand often spans both rural acreage and fast-moving development corridors.

City limits, county jurisdiction, and zoning records

A local surveyor helps you sort out whether your tract is inside a city, in unincorporated Bartow County, or near a jurisdiction line that affects permitting and land use review. For unincorporated property, Bartow County's zoning ordinance says the Official Zoning Maps are kept in the office of the Zoning Administrator at the Frank Moore Administrative and Judicial Center on West Cherokee Avenue in Cartersville and are available for public inspection during business hours. That is useful when your deed description, listing details, or tax parcel notes do not line up neatly with current zoning.

Lake, historic, and flood-map context

Bartow County's zoning ordinance also includes special districts such as the Allatoona Overlay District and the Etowah Valley Historic District. On some tracts, especially around Lake Allatoona, older corridors, or land headed for rezoning, that kind of local context can affect what supporting map work or coordination is needed. A Bartow-based surveyor is more likely to spot those issues early instead of after design work has started.

Common survey projects in the county

Most calls in Bartow County fall into a few categories. Boundary surveys are common for home purchases, fence disputes, additions, barns, driveway questions, and larger acreage tracts. Topographic surveys are often needed before grading, drainage, utility planning, or site design. Builders and developers commonly need construction staking, subdivision or recombination plats, easement exhibits, and right-of-way work. Commercial buyers may need an ALTA/NSPS survey for closing and lender review.

Flood-related work also comes up. Bartow County rezoning materials require certain applications to include a scaled plat showing floodplains from FEMA FIRM maps for Bartow County and the county's regulatory floodmaps, prepared by a currently registered architect, engineer, landscape architect, or land surveyor. If your parcel touches a mapped floodplain or a permit reviewer raises flood questions, ask firms whether they handle that type of coordination and whether elevation-certificate support is part of their services.

What to have ready before contacting firms

You will get faster and more accurate quotes if you send a small package of information instead of a one-line request.

For owners, buyers, and agents

Have the property address, parcel ID, deed, title commitment if you are in a closing, and any prior survey or recorded plat. Add a few photos if corners, fences, walls, or encroachments are part of the issue. If your concern is practical, such as where to build a fence or whether a shed crosses a line, say that clearly.

For builders and small developers

Have the concept plan, utility plan if one exists, proposed use, and your target schedule for permitting or construction. Bartow County Water Department standards say residential, commercial, and industrial developments must be reviewed, approved, and inspected by the department, and final utility as-builts are submitted in Georgia State Plane, NAD 1983 West Foot. That is a good reason to hire a surveyor who is comfortable working with engineers, utility reviewers, and digital deliverables.

If the end product may be recorded, ask about the final format early. The Bartow County Clerk of Superior Court fee schedule lists plats and maps at $10 for the first page and $10 for each additional page, which helps you ask better questions about whether a survey is only for information, for a closing file, or for formal recording.

Records, plats, and mapping research

Good survey work in Bartow County usually starts before anyone goes to the field. Surveyors may research deed and plat records, parcel and tax mapping, zoning records, GIS layers, and FEMA flood information where relevant. In older parts of the county, a prior plat, an older deed call, and current occupation on the ground do not always match perfectly. In newer growth areas, the challenge is often the opposite: recent development, utility planning, and tight deadlines. Local experience helps in both settings.

Compare local options in Bartow County

If you are ready to contact firms, compare local options, confirm Georgia licensure, and ask about your exact project type at /georgia/bartow/. The right surveyor for Bartow County is the one whose experience matches your parcel, your records, and your deadline.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does my surveyor need a Georgia license?

Yes. Land surveying in Georgia requires professional licensure, so ask whether the work will be signed by a Georgia Professional Land Surveyor and whether the firm is properly authorized to practice.

What should I send before asking for a quote?

Send the site address, parcel ID if you have it, your deed, any prior plat or title commitment, photos of visible corners or fences, and a short note about why you need the survey and your deadline.

Why does Bartow County local experience matter?

Local experience helps with Bartow County deed and plat research, unincorporated zoning review, parcel mapping, flood-map questions, and coordination with county utility or development requirements when a project moves beyond a simple boundary survey.

Do I need a new survey if my property already has a recorded plat?

Maybe not, but a recorded plat does not always answer a current boundary, fence, easement, or improvement question. A surveyor can review the older plat and tell you whether fresh fieldwork is still needed.

Can a Bartow County surveyor help with flood-zone or elevation-certificate questions?

Yes. If your parcel is near a mapped floodplain or a permit reviewer asks for flood information, a qualified surveyor can confirm map status, explain whether an elevation certificate may be needed, and coordinate with design professionals when required.

Sources

  1. U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts: Bartow County, Georgia
  2. Bartow County Zoning Ordinance
  3. Bartow County Water Department Design and Construction Guidelines
  4. Georgia Professional Engineers and Land Surveyors Board
  5. Georgia Professional Engineers and Land Surveyors Laws and Rules
  6. FEMA Flood Map Service Center
  7. Georgia Professional Engineers and Land Surveyors Board: Land Surveyor Information
Georgia cost guide

See how survey costs vary across Georgia by survey type and parcel size.

Read the Georgia cost guide →

Common questions about land surveys in Bartow County

Does my surveyor need a Georgia license?+

Yes. Land surveying in Georgia requires professional licensure, so ask whether the work will be signed by a Georgia Professional Land Surveyor and whether the firm is properly authorized to practice.

What should I send before asking for a quote?+

Send the site address, parcel ID if you have it, your deed, any prior plat or title commitment, photos of visible corners or fences, and a short note about why you need the survey and your deadline.

Why does Bartow County local experience matter?+

Local experience helps with Bartow County deed and plat research, unincorporated zoning review, parcel mapping, flood-map questions, and coordination with county utility or development requirements when a project moves beyond a simple boundary survey.

Do I need a new survey if my property already has a recorded plat?+

Maybe not, but a recorded plat does not always answer a current boundary, fence, easement, or improvement question. A surveyor can review the older plat and tell you whether fresh fieldwork is still needed.

Can a Bartow County surveyor help with flood-zone or elevation-certificate questions?+

Yes. If your parcel is near a mapped floodplain or a permit reviewer asks for flood information, a qualified surveyor can confirm map status, explain whether an elevation certificate may be needed, and coordinate with design professionals when required.

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