Louisiana › Caddo Parish

Land Surveyors in Caddo Parish, LA

14 surveyors 1 cities covered Boundary survey $350 to $900

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

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About this Caddo Parish page

Caddo 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.
14 profiles shown
14 local office profiles
0 service-area listings
6 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 Caddo Parish

Choose by project fit, not just rating

Caddo 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.

Topo, grading, or site plan
1 profile signal

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

Local directory signals
14profiles
14local offices
7websites
6license records

Listings cover 1 local city in this directory view.

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14 surveyors in Caddo Parish
Caddo Parish Surveyor Guide

How to hire a land surveyor in Caddo Parish, LA

Updated for 2026 · 5 min read

How to find a land surveyor in Caddo Parish, Louisiana

If you need a land surveyor in Caddo Parish, Louisiana, start by matching the surveyor to the job type, then ask about local record research, floodplain review, and turnaround for your part of the parish. Property owners in Shreveport, Blanchard, Greenwood, Belcher, Bethany, Gilliam, Hosston, and Ida often need boundary work for purchases, fence lines, additions, rural tracts, and small development sites. The best fit is usually a Louisiana Professional Land Surveyor who regularly works with parish deed research, parcel mapping, and local development rules. You can compare firms serving the parish on /louisiana/caddo/, then call with your address, deed, and project goal.

Why local survey experience matters

Caddo Parish combines the Shreveport urban area with unincorporated land, older subdivisions, and rural acreage, so the research path can change from one property to the next. A surveyor who knows the parish can move faster when a job depends on courthouse research, subdivision references, or section-township-range descriptions.

Parish records and mapping matter early

The Caddo Parish Clerk of Court states that its office keeps parish records including mortgages and conveyances, which are core sources for boundary research. The Caddo Parish Assessor also offers free public real estate search tools and says users can search by owner name, section-township-range, and subdivision, then view property on GIS maps. That combination is useful when a surveyor is tracing ownership, locating parcel context, or checking how a tract is described across older and newer records.

Floodplain review can affect scope

Local experience is especially helpful if a property may be near a mapped flood area or if site work is planned in unincorporated Caddo Parish. The parish Public Works flood information page says that outside the City of Shreveport and beyond the MPC area, which it describes as five miles outside city limits, trained staff can help verify whether a parcel is in a flood zone using FEMA flood maps. The same page says a development permit is required to build in the parish, and an elevation certificate is required when building in a flood hazard area. That does not mean every parcel needs elevation work, but it does mean flood review can change the survey scope.

Common survey projects in the county

Most clients in Caddo Parish are looking for one of a few common services. Boundary surveys are typical for home purchases, fence disputes, lot improvements, and rural tract ownership questions. Topographic surveys are often needed before drainage, grading, or site design. Commercial buyers and lenders may need an ALTA/NSPS survey. Builders and contractors may need construction staking for buildings, drives, utilities, or site work. Small developers may need subdivision plats, resubdivision mapping, or boundary adjustments. Some owners also need servitude or right-of-way work, especially where access, utilities, or roadway improvements are involved.

When floodplain questions are part of the project, a surveyor may also be asked for elevation support tied to FEMA mapping and local review. In practical terms, that means a simple boundary survey and a buildable-site survey can be very different jobs, even on the same parcel.

What to have ready before contacting firms

You will get better pricing and faster answers if you send the basic documents up front. Start with the site address and parcel number if you have it. Add your deed, title commitment, closing documents, prior survey, subdivision lot and block, and any sketches that show the area in question. If the issue involves a fence, driveway, pond, ditch, utility line, or suspected encroachment, say that clearly.

Best information to send on day one

Include whether the property is in Shreveport, a smaller town such as Greenwood or Blanchard, or an unincorporated part of the parish. Mention if the tract is vacant land, a homesite, a commercial parcel, or acreage with multiple improvements. If you are buying, say when you need the survey. If you are building, say what permit or lender requirement is driving the deadline. A surveyor can often tell from that first message whether you need boundary work only, a more detailed topo package, or flood-related elevation work.

Records, permits, and local offices that may shape the job

In Caddo Parish, survey work often starts with the same cluster of local sources. The Clerk of Court is a primary record office for conveyance and mortgage research. The Assessor's tools can help identify parcel references and mapping context. For planning and land development, the Shreveport-Caddo Metropolitan Planning Commission says it is the official planning agency for the City of Shreveport and the immediate environs of Caddo Parish, and that it handles zoning and land subdivision administration, site plans, variances, special use permits, and related development applications. That matters because survey scope often expands when a project is tied to a rezoning, lot split, or formal site review.

At the state level, Louisiana land survey work is regulated by the Louisiana Professional Engineering and Land Surveying Board. LAPELS also states that the board's laws are contained in Louisiana Revised Statutes 37:681 through 37:703. If you are hiring for a boundary or development survey, ask who will seal the work and whether the surveyor regularly performs that type of project in Louisiana.

Questions to ask before you hire

Ask what kind of survey they recommend for your goal, what records they expect to review, whether they anticipate courthouse research, and whether floodplain or permit issues could expand the scope. Ask how they handle missing corners, occupation lines that do not match record lines, and older subdivision evidence. You should also ask what deliverable you will receive, such as a signed plat, staking, topo file, or elevation documentation.

Timing depends on workload, document quality, site conditions, and how much record reconciliation is required. A clean city lot with a clear prior survey is different from a larger tract with mixed deed calls and floodplain questions.

Compare surveyors serving Caddo Parish

If you are ready to start, review firms serving the parish at /louisiana/caddo/. Use that page to narrow your shortlist, then contact firms with your address, documents, and target deadline so they can tell you whether the job needs a boundary survey, topographic work, staking, or flood-related elevation support.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I confirm a land surveyor is licensed in Louisiana?

Ask whether the surveyor is a Louisiana Professional Land Surveyor, or PLS, regulated by the Louisiana Professional Engineering and Land Surveying Board. A qualified firm should be able to confirm current Louisiana licensing for the person sealing your survey.

What should I have ready before calling a surveyor in Caddo Parish?

Have the site address, parcel or tax ID if available, deed information, any prior survey, title commitment, subdivision lot and block details, and a short explanation of your project. Photos of fences, drives, canals, and visible corner evidence can also help.

Where do surveyors usually research property records in Caddo Parish?

Surveyors often start with parish land records, assessor parcel data, GIS mapping, subdivision references, and floodplain information where available. In Caddo Parish, the Clerk of Court and Assessor are key starting points for many jobs.

Do I need flood-zone or elevation work in Caddo Parish?

Maybe. If your property is in a mapped flood hazard area or if local review requires it, a surveyor may need to provide elevation data or support an elevation certificate. In unincorporated parish areas, Caddo Public Works notes that a development permit is required to build in the parish, and an elevation certificate is required when building in a flood hazard area.

Does local experience matter for surveys around Shreveport and nearby towns?

Yes. Local experience helps when a project touches older subdivisions, section-township-range descriptions, unincorporated parish permitting, or floodplain review outside Shreveport. That can save time during research and fieldwork.

Sources

  1. Caddo Parish Clerk of Court
  2. Caddo Parish Assessor's Office
  3. All Flood Protection Information | Parish of Caddo
  4. Louisiana Professional Engineering and Land Surveying Board
  5. LAPELS Laws and Rules
  6. FEMA Flood Map Service Center
  7. What Is The MPC? | Shreveport Caddo Parish MPC
Caddo Parish cost guide

Detailed pricing for every common survey type in Caddo Parish.

Read the Caddo Parish cost guide →

Common questions about land surveys in Caddo Parish

How do I confirm a land surveyor is licensed in Louisiana?+

Ask whether the surveyor is a Louisiana Professional Land Surveyor, or PLS, regulated by the Louisiana Professional Engineering and Land Surveying Board. A qualified firm should be able to confirm current Louisiana licensing for the person sealing your survey.

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

Have the site address, parcel or tax ID if available, deed information, any prior survey, title commitment, subdivision lot and block details, and a short explanation of your project. Photos of fences, drives, canals, and visible corner evidence can also help.

Where do surveyors usually research property records in Caddo Parish?+

Surveyors often start with parish land records, assessor parcel data, GIS mapping, subdivision references, and floodplain information where available. In Caddo Parish, the Clerk of Court and Assessor are key starting points for many jobs.

Do I need flood-zone or elevation work in Caddo Parish?+

Maybe. If your property is in a mapped flood hazard area or if local review requires it, a surveyor may need to provide elevation data or support an elevation certificate. In unincorporated parish areas, Caddo Public Works notes that a development permit is required to build in the parish, and an elevation certificate is required when building in a flood hazard area.

Does local experience matter for surveys around Shreveport and nearby towns?+

Yes. Local experience helps when a project touches older subdivisions, section-township-range descriptions, unincorporated parish permitting, or floodplain review outside Shreveport. That can save time during research and fieldwork.

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