Louisiana › Rapides Parish

Land Surveyors in Rapides Parish, LA

8 surveyors 2 cities covered Boundary survey $350 to $900

Find licensed professional land surveyors in Rapides 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 Rapides Parish.

Directory transparency

About this Rapides Parish page

Rapides 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
4 with license info
0 claimed profiles
6 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 Rapides Parish

Choose by project fit, not just rating

Rapides 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
3 profile signals

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

Local directory signals
8profiles
8local offices
6websites
4license records

Listings cover 2 local cities in this directory view.

Compare local cost factors →
Filter:All (8)Boundary Survey (3)
8 surveyors in Rapides Parish
Rapides Parish Surveyor Guide

How to hire a land surveyor in Rapides Parish, LA

Updated for 2026 · 5 min read

How to find a land surveyor in Rapides Parish

If you need a land surveyor in Rapides Parish, Louisiana, start with firms that regularly work in Alexandria, Pineville, Cheneyville, Lecompte, Deville, Libuse, Echo, and nearby rural areas. The best match is usually a Louisiana Professional Land Surveyor who already understands parish record research, local permit paths, and how floodplain review affects certain tracts. For most owners, buyers, agents, and builders, the fastest approach is to contact a few local firms through our Rapides Parish directory, explain the property location and goal, and ask what records or site details they need before quoting.

Rapides Parish is a substantial Central Louisiana market with 130,023 residents counted in the 2020 Census, so survey requests range from city lots in Alexandria and Pineville to larger rural parcels outside municipal limits. That mix matters because a downtown boundary retracement, a subdivision lot check, and a rural tract with servitudes or floodplain issues can require very different research and field time.

Why local survey experience matters

Local experience matters because Rapides Parish survey work is not just about measuring corners in the field. It often starts with parish-specific record review, jurisdiction checks, and map screening.

Records research can shape the job

The Rapides Parish Clerk of Court states that the clerk receives deeds, mortgages, and other instruments filed in the public records of the parish, and that conveyance records include deeds, partitions, rights of way, and plats. The clerk also notes that parish records begin in 1865, because earlier records were destroyed in a courthouse fire during the Civil War. On older family land, inherited property, or acreage that has changed shape over time, that history can affect how a surveyor approaches title and boundary research.

Permit paths differ by location

Jurisdiction matters too. The clerk's general information page directs building permit questions inside Alexandria to the city, inside Pineville to the city, and outside both city limits to the Rapides Area Planning Commission. For a survey customer, that means a tract just outside a city boundary may follow a different review path than a similar parcel inside town. A surveyor with local experience can help flag which office is likely to matter before design or construction moves too far.

Common survey projects in the parish

In Rapides Parish, common jobs include boundary surveys for purchases, fence lines, additions, and rural acreage; topographic surveys for drainage and site planning; subdivision or resubdivision mapping; construction staking; servitude and right of way work; and ALTA/NSPS surveys for commercial properties. Boundary work is especially common in local listings, which fits a parish where buyers and owners often need reliable lines before building, dividing, or selling land.

Residential and rural boundary work

For homesites in Alexandria, Pineville, Lecompte, or Cheneyville, owners often need a boundary survey before a fence, shop, driveway expansion, or closing. Outside the main cities, larger tracts may require more time for deed analysis, monument recovery, and coordination with neighboring occupation lines or long access drives.

Floodplain and elevation-related work

Flood context is not a side issue here. The Rapides Area Planning Commission states that 30% of Rapides Parish is located in a high-risk flood hazard area. It also states that a development permit is required before you build, locate, or substantially improve certain structures in Rapides Parish. When a parcel is near mapped flood hazard areas, your surveyor may need to coordinate with site plans, elevations, or other floodplain-related information, especially for new construction or major improvements.

Where surveyors usually research property information

Before fieldwork, surveyors may review deed, plat, parcel, GIS, tax, and floodplain information where available. In Rapides Parish, the assessor's office provides free online real property search and interactive mapping, which can help customers gather parcel identifiers and basic location context before the first call. That does not replace a survey, but it can speed up intake.

Rapides Area Planning Commission also maintains online mapping for the parish and warns that its map is not an official FEMA Flood Insurance Rate Map for insurance purposes. That is useful because it gives owners a quick screening tool while making clear that official flood map questions still need proper confirmation. A qualified surveyor can tell you whether an ordinary boundary survey is enough or whether flood-zone interpretation, elevation work, or additional site control may be needed.

What to have ready before contacting firms

You will get better responses, and usually a faster quote, if you prepare the basic job file before contacting survey firms.

Useful documents and details

Have the property address, tax parcel number if known, deed, title commitment or closing paperwork, any prior survey, any subdivision lot and block reference, and a short description of why you need the survey. If the job involves construction, include a concept site plan, expected building location, and your target schedule.

Questions worth asking

Ask whether the firm regularly works in your part of Rapides Parish, whether floodplain or permit coordination is likely, whether field crews need access arranged, and whether the deliverable will be a signed plat, staking, topographic data, or an elevation-related product. Also ask what could change the fee, such as missing monuments, access problems, or a deed description that requires deeper research.

Licensing and expectations in Louisiana

Louisiana land surveying is regulated by the Louisiana Professional Engineering and Land Surveying Board. In practical terms, you should expect the work to be performed under the authority of a Louisiana Professional Land Surveyor. That matters because boundary opinions, mapped deliverables, and record interpretation are not interchangeable with a simple locator service or informal measurement.

It is also worth being clear about the purpose of the job. A mortgage closing, a fence dispute, a commercial acquisition, and a development tract can all require different scopes. When you describe the exact use up front, firms can quote the right service instead of under-scoping the work.

Start with Rapides Parish listings

If you are ready to compare options, start with Rapides Parish land surveyor listings. Use the directory to identify firms serving Alexandria, Pineville, and the rest of the parish, then contact a few with your deed, parcel details, and project goal. A local surveyor can confirm licensing, explain likely record research, and tell you whether boundary, topographic, staking, or flood-related work is the right next step.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I confirm who will sign the survey?

Ask whether the survey will be performed or supervised by a Louisiana Professional Land Surveyor, or PLS. Surveying in Louisiana is regulated by the Louisiana Professional Engineering and Land Surveying Board.

What should I send a survey firm before they quote the job?

Send the site address, parcel number if you have it, your deed or title commitment, any old survey or plat, the purpose of the survey, and a rough deadline. In Rapides Parish, assessor parcel information and clerk records can help firms screen the job faster.

Where are Rapides Parish land records and parcel details typically checked?

Surveyors commonly review Rapides Parish Clerk of Court records for recorded land documents and plats, plus Rapides Parish Assessor parcel records and mapping. A surveyor will decide which records are relevant for your tract.

Do flood zones matter for surveys in Rapides Parish?

Often, yes. Rapides Area Planning Commission states that 30% of the parish is in a high risk flood hazard area, so flood-zone review can matter for site planning, elevation questions, and permit screening.

Who handles permit questions in unincorporated Rapides Parish?

Rapides Parish Clerk of Court general information points permit callers outside Alexandria and Pineville to the Rapides Area Planning Commission. Inside those cities, permit procedures can differ, so local jurisdiction matters.

Sources

  1. Floodplain Management | RAPC
  2. Rapides Parish Clerk of Court Home
  3. Rapides Parish Clerk of Court General Information
  4. Louisiana Professional Engineering and Land Surveying Board
  5. LAPELS Laws and Rules
  6. FEMA Flood Map Service Center
  7. Rapides Parish Assessor
Rapides Parish cost guide

Detailed pricing for every common survey type in Rapides Parish.

Read the Rapides Parish cost guide →

Common questions about land surveys in Rapides Parish

How do I confirm who will sign the survey?+

Ask whether the survey will be performed or supervised by a Louisiana Professional Land Surveyor, or PLS. Surveying in Louisiana is regulated by the Louisiana Professional Engineering and Land Surveying Board.

What should I send a survey firm before they quote the job?+

Send the site address, parcel number if you have it, your deed or title commitment, any old survey or plat, the purpose of the survey, and a rough deadline. In Rapides Parish, assessor parcel information and clerk records can help firms screen the job faster.

Where are Rapides Parish land records and parcel details typically checked?+

Surveyors commonly review Rapides Parish Clerk of Court records for recorded land documents and plats, plus Rapides Parish Assessor parcel records and mapping. A surveyor will decide which records are relevant for your tract.

Do flood zones matter for surveys in Rapides Parish?+

Often, yes. Rapides Area Planning Commission states that 30% of the parish is in a high risk flood hazard area, so flood-zone review can matter for site planning, elevation questions, and permit screening.

Who handles permit questions in unincorporated Rapides Parish?+

Rapides Parish Clerk of Court general information points permit callers outside Alexandria and Pineville to the Rapides Area Planning Commission. Inside those cities, permit procedures can differ, so local jurisdiction matters.

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