Vermont's Most Active Survey Market
Chittenden County is Vermont's most populous county and the hub of its survey industry. Nine licensed LLS firms operate here, with seven based in Burlington and two in South Burlington, serving the full range of residential, commercial, and institutional survey needs across the county. Burlington, Vermont's largest city at roughly 45,000 residents and the center of a 230,000-person metro area, sits on the eastern shore of Lake Champlain and anchors this dense network of surveyors.
Growing communities including Williston to the east, Essex Junction, Essex, and Colchester keep survey demand strong year-round. Whether you need a simple boundary survey on a Burlington residential lot or a detailed ALTA survey for a Williston commercial corridor property, multiple licensed firms are available to compete for your project.
Survey Types in Chittenden County
Residential Boundary Surveys
Residential boundary surveys are the most common request across the county. Burlington homeowners commission them before installing fences, adding additions, or resolving disputes with neighbors. In South Burlington, Williston, and Colchester, new construction and property subdivisions generate steady boundary survey work. Surveyors trace metes-and-bounds deeds through the town clerk's records in whichever municipality the parcel sits, then set or recover physical monuments at the corners.
ALTA Surveys
South Burlington and Williston are Chittenden County's most active commercial development corridors. The Williston Road and Shelburne Road commercial strips in South Burlington, along with the growing retail and medical development along Route 2 in Williston, generate a consistent stream of ALTA/NSPS survey requests. Lenders and title companies require ALTA surveys for commercial transactions in these areas. Downtown Burlington's mixed-use and institutional properties also produce ALTA work regularly.
Elevation Certificates
Lake Champlain forms Chittenden County's entire western border, and Zone AE flood hazard areas follow the Burlington and Colchester waterfront. The Winooski River flows through the city of Winooski and into Colchester before joining the lake, with Zone AE designations along the river corridor. Property owners in these areas routinely need elevation certificates for flood insurance and mortgage requirements. Surveyors with local flood zone experience understand the specific FEMA map panels covering each section of the lakeshore and river corridor.
Construction Staking
Chittenden County's active development pipeline across Williston, Essex, and Colchester requires substantial construction staking work. Surveyors place stakes for foundations, utility corridors, road alignments, and grading to keep construction crews working within permitted setbacks and site plans. Booking a surveyor early in the permitting process, before breaking ground, avoids delays at critical construction milestones.
UVM and Institutional Surveys
The University of Vermont's Burlington campus and the University of Vermont Medical Center generate periodic survey work for campus expansions, utility relocations, and property boundary documentation. Firms familiar with institutional survey work and the specific record systems used by the university and the City of Burlington handle these projects efficiently.
How Vermont's Metes-and-Bounds System Affects Your Survey
Vermont does not use the Public Land Survey System of townships and ranges found in many western states. Chittenden County parcels are described by metes-and-bounds deeds, with records held at the town clerk's offices in Burlington, South Burlington, Williston, Colchester, Essex, and Winooski, among others. Each town maintains its own land records separately, so a surveyor tracing the history of a parcel in Colchester works through Colchester's records, while a Burlington parcel requires research at Burlington City Hall.
Firms that regularly work in specific Chittenden County municipalities build up prior research files, monument records, and familiarity with each town's record system. That accumulated local knowledge speeds deed research and helps resolve gaps or ambiguities in the chain of title more efficiently than a firm encountering the area for the first time.
Questions to Ask Before Hiring
- Do you hold an active Vermont LLS license?
- Have you worked in this specific Chittenden County municipality before?
- Which town clerk records will you need to research for this parcel?
- What type of monuments will you set, and will the survey be recorded?
- What is your current backlog and estimated turnaround time?
- Does the quoted price include deed research and monument setting, or are those separate?
Lake Champlain Waterfront Experience
Surveying waterfront parcels along Lake Champlain involves questions specific to water boundaries: the ordinary high-water mark, riparian rights, and the interaction between private ownership and the public shoreline. Surveyors who have worked extensively along the Burlington and Colchester waterfront understand how to research and document these boundaries and how flood zone designations intersect with property lines on the lake's edge.
Find a Licensed Surveyor in Chittenden County
Use the directory as a starting point, then confirm the responsible surveyor's current license before hiring. Browse firms serving Burlington, South Burlington, Williston, Essex, Colchester, and Winooski at /vermont/chittenden/.