Louisiana › Bossier Parish

Land Surveyors in Bossier Parish, LA

8 surveyors 3 cities covered Boundary survey $350 to $900

Find licensed professional land surveyors in Bossier Parish, Louisiana. Browse by specialty or city. Phone numbers visible on every listing. Call directly, no middleman.

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Pick the one that sounds closest. We will connect you with a surveyor in Bossier Parish.

Directory transparency

About this Bossier Parish page

Bossier Parish 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.
  • Louisiana license information shown where available
  • Non-surveying entities and government offices are removed when identified.
8 profiles shown
8 local office profiles
0 service-area listings
5 with license info
0 claimed profiles
7 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 Bossier Parish

Choose by project fit, not just rating

Bossier Parish 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
1 profile signal

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

Topo, grading, or site plan
1 profile signal

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

Construction staking
1 profile signal

Ask how many site visits are included and whether staking is based on final approved plans.

Local directory signals
8profiles
8local offices
7websites
5license records

Listings cover 3 local cities in this directory view.

Compare local cost factors →
Filter:All (8)
8 surveyors in Bossier Parish
Bossier Parish Surveyor Guide

How to hire a land surveyor in Bossier Parish, LA

Updated for 2026 · 5 min read

How to find a land surveyor in Bossier Parish, Louisiana

If you need a land surveyor Bossier Parish Louisiana property owners can trust, start by matching the surveyor to the job, not just the price. A fence dispute in Haughton, a purchase in Bossier City, a rural tract near Plain Dealing, and a commercial site in Benton all call for slightly different experience. Ask whether the firm regularly handles boundary surveys, construction staking, topographic work, subdivision mapping, or FEMA-related elevation support. Then confirm that the surveyor is licensed in Louisiana as a Professional Land Surveyor through the Louisiana Professional Engineering and Land Surveying Board.

Bossier Parish is large enough to have both suburban growth patterns and rural acreage issues. Census QuickFacts lists the parish at 131,102 people as of the July 1, 2024 estimate, up from 128,746 at the 2020 Census. That mix matters when hiring. In built-up areas, you may need a surveyor who is comfortable with platted lots, setbacks, and permit review. On larger tracts around Princeton, Elm Grove, or outside municipal limits, you may need stronger boundary research, route surveying, or field evidence work.

Why local survey experience matters

Local experience is valuable because Bossier Parish projects often sit at the overlap of parish records, assessor mapping, GIS data, and planning or permit review. A surveyor who already works in Bossier Parish will usually know which public sources are useful, how local review tends to work, and when online mapping is only a starting point.

Floodplain and drainage context

Bossier Parish's Engineering Department says the land is flat, stormwater runoff is extremely slow, and numerous areas of the parish lie in a Special Flood Hazard Area. The same parish page notes that the southernmost portion of the parish experiences backwater flooding from the Red River. For buyers, builders, and small developers, that means flood-zone questions should come up early, especially in lower ground and southern areas. A qualified surveyor can help determine when boundary work, topography, or elevation-related deliverables should be coordinated with floodplain review.

GIS is useful, but it is not a survey

The parish GIS department is clear that its web maps are not survey products and do not take the place of a legal survey or original source documentation. It also states that online GIS should not be used to verify floodplain or zoning status by itself. That is important in Bossier Parish because many owners first look at parcel viewers before calling a professional. GIS can help you identify a parcel and start a conversation, but it is not the same thing as a boundary opinion on the ground.

Common survey projects in Bossier Parish

Most customers are looking for one of a few common project types. The right scope depends on whether your property is a lot in town, a homesite in an unincorporated area, or a commercial tract.

Residential and rural boundary work

Boundary surveys are common for purchases, fences, additions, and inherited family land. In Bossier City, Benton, and Haughton, owners often need a current survey before building near setbacks or replacing old fencing. Outside town, larger parcels can involve longer line recovery, access questions, easements, or older deed descriptions that deserve more research time.

Site development and construction

Topographic surveys and construction staking are common for new buildings, drainage design, utility work, and site grading. If you are planning a commercial project or a new homesite, ask whether the firm can provide both field control and deliverables that fit your engineer, architect, or contractor workflow. That can save time when the same project moves from due diligence to design and then to staking.

Subdivision, servitude, and right-of-way work

Small developers and landowners may also need subdivision plats, resubdivision mapping, boundary adjustments, servitude surveys, or right-of-way support. These jobs usually benefit from a surveyor who is comfortable coordinating with planning staff and reviewing plats, legal descriptions, and parcel mapping together rather than in isolation.

Records, planning, and permit context to know

Bossier Parish customers should expect some projects to involve more than a field visit. Surveyors may review deed, plat, parcel, GIS, tax, and floodplain information where available, then compare those sources with physical evidence on the ground.

Permit review can affect what you need

The parish states that building permits for unincorporated areas can be applied for online. The Benton-Parish Metropolitan Planning Commission also explains that site plans may need property lines, legal descriptions, setbacks, adjacent streets, utility easements, and drainage easements. For many projects, that means the survey is not just for a closing file. It may be part of the permit package, site layout, or zoning review path.

In and around Bossier City, the Bossier City-Parish Metropolitan Planning Commission says its jurisdiction covers the city and the unincorporated part of Bossier Parish lying within 5 miles of the city. That is a useful local detail because two nearby parcels can fall under different review patterns depending on where they sit. If your site is near city limits, mention that when you call.

What to have ready before contacting firms

You will get better quotes, and often faster scheduling, if you send basic property information up front.

Helpful documents and details

Have the property address, subdivision and lot information if applicable, parcel number, deed, title commitment if you are buying, any old survey, and a short note about why you need the work. If there are known fence lines, corners, encroachments, drainage ditches, or planned improvements, include that too. For permit-driven work, mention whether the site is in Bossier City, Benton, Haughton, or an unincorporated part of the parish, and whether you expect zoning, site plan, or floodplain review.

Also ask about turnaround time, field access, deliverables, and whether the quote includes courthouse or office research, monuments, a signed plat, staking, or optional topographic data. For a purchase, give the closing date. For construction, give the permit or mobilization timeline.

Start with Bossier Parish surveyor listings

If you are ready to compare local options, start with the Bossier Parish surveyor directory. It is the fastest way to identify firms serving Bossier City, Benton, Haughton, Plain Dealing, Princeton, Elm Grove, and nearby areas, then contact the ones whose experience fits your property and project scope.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I confirm who will sign the survey?

Ask for the surveyor's Louisiana Professional Land Surveyor license information and confirm it through the Louisiana Professional Engineering and Land Surveying Board, which provides individual and firm search tools.

What should I have ready before calling a Bossier Parish surveyor?

Have the site address, parcel number if available, deed or title documents, any prior survey or plat, the purpose of the survey, and a rough timeline for closing, permitting, fencing, or construction.

Why does Bossier Parish floodplain context matter for a survey?

Bossier Parish states that much of the parish is flat, drainage is slow, and the southern portion can see Red River backwater flooding. That can affect boundary planning, site design, and whether elevation-related work is needed.

Can I rely on parish GIS maps instead of hiring a surveyor?

No. Bossier Parish GIS states its online data are not survey products and do not replace a legal survey or original source documentation. A licensed surveyor is the right source for boundary location and survey certification.

Will a survey help with permits in unincorporated Bossier Parish?

Often, yes. Parish permit and planning pages show that site plans, setbacks, property lines, drainage easements, and zoning review can matter before permits are issued, so a current survey can reduce delays.

Sources

  1. U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts: Bossier Parish, Louisiana
  2. FEMA Information - Engineering Department - Bossier Parish Police Jury
  3. Maps - Geographic Information System (GIS) - Bossier Parish Police Jury
  4. Metropolitan Planning Commission | Bossier City, LA
  5. Louisiana Professional Engineering and Land Surveying Board
  6. LAPELS Laws and Rules
  7. FEMA Flood Map Service Center
Louisiana cost guide

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

Read the Louisiana cost guide →

Common questions about land surveys in Bossier Parish

How do I confirm who will sign the survey?+

Ask for the surveyor's Louisiana Professional Land Surveyor license information and confirm it through the Louisiana Professional Engineering and Land Surveying Board, which provides individual and firm search tools.

What should I have ready before calling a Bossier Parish surveyor?+

Have the site address, parcel number if available, deed or title documents, any prior survey or plat, the purpose of the survey, and a rough timeline for closing, permitting, fencing, or construction.

Why does Bossier Parish floodplain context matter for a survey?+

Bossier Parish states that much of the parish is flat, drainage is slow, and the southern portion can see Red River backwater flooding. That can affect boundary planning, site design, and whether elevation-related work is needed.

Can I rely on parish GIS maps instead of hiring a surveyor?+

No. Bossier Parish GIS states its online data are not survey products and do not replace a legal survey or original source documentation. A licensed surveyor is the right source for boundary location and survey certification.

Will a survey help with permits in unincorporated Bossier Parish?+

Often, yes. Parish permit and planning pages show that site plans, setbacks, property lines, drainage easements, and zoning review can matter before permits are issued, so a current survey can reduce delays.

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