Story County’s survey market splits between a growing college town and productive agricultural land. Ames, home to Iowa State University, drives residential and commercial survey demand. Nevada, Gilbert, Roland, Huxley, and Cambridge anchor smaller but consistent markets in the surrounding rural county. Story County has 5 licensed surveyors in our directory.
Survey Demand in Story County
Ames residential market: Ames is one of Iowa’s more active residential real estate markets, sustained by a steady flow of students, faculty, and university staff. New home purchases, additions, fence lines, and infill development all generate boundary survey demand. The city’s older neighborhoods near downtown have plats that sometimes contain recording inconsistencies, making it worth choosing a surveyor familiar with Story County Recorder records.
Iowa State University corridor: The commercial and mixed-use zones around the ISU campus, along Lincoln Way, University Boulevard, and US-30, generate commercial survey demand. ALTA surveys are standard for most commercial real estate transactions in Ames. Development projects near the university also require utility surveys, topographic surveys, and construction staking.
South Skunk River and Ioway Creek flood zones: Several Ames neighborhoods near the South Skunk River and Ioway Creek (formerly Squaw Creek) fall within FEMA-mapped AE flood zones. Property owners in these areas need elevation certificates for NFIP flood insurance policies and building permits in affected zones. A Story County PLS can confirm flood zone status and prepare the necessary FEMA Form 086-0-33.
Agricultural surveys in rural Story County: The rolling farmland between Ames, Nevada, Gilbert, and Huxley generates regular agricultural survey demand. Estate settlements, tile drainage disputes, fence line questions, and farmland sales all require licensed survey work. Agricultural survey experience is important here, since rural Iowa parcels often involve older legal descriptions referencing the Public Land Survey System.
What to Look for in a Story County PLS
Iowa requires land surveyors to hold a PLS license issued by the Iowa Engineering and Land Surveying Examining Board under Iowa Code Chapter 542B. When hiring a surveyor in Story County, confirm that the license is active in Iowa’s licensing system. For commercial work near ISU, ask about ALTA experience and professional liability insurance. For agricultural surveys, ask about the firm’s familiarity with Story County Auditor and Recorder records and with rural Iowa plat documents.
Turnaround expectations vary: residential boundary surveys take 2 to 4 weeks, ALTA surveys 4 to 6 weeks, and elevation certificates often 1 to 2 weeks. Survey firms in Ames often serve Nevada, Huxley, Roland, Gilbert, and Cambridge, so a single local firm can usually cover the entire county.
To find a licensed land surveyor in Story County, browse our directory. Use the directory as a starting point, then confirm the responsible surveyor's current license before hiring.