Monday, January 18, 2016

How a Land Survey Protects Home Buyers

Purchasing a home involves a lot of different processes all taking place during the same time frame. Once a contract is executed, it puts in motion several actions that must be completed prior to the closing. All of these things take time and require professionals who are knowledgeable and experienced in their particular field. The typical home buyer is a novice to all of this. That is why they need expert counsel by a caring REALTOR who will guide them through the process and explain the importance of things like title insurance and land surveys. Without understanding the purpose of having these things, many home buyers will feel overwhelmed and opt to skip some items to save a little money upfront. Here are a few basics about land surveys and how having one done will help prevent future costs and headaches for home buyers.

What is a survey?

A survey is the official and documented opinion of a certified surveyor on the location of a property's boundaries, buildings, structures, easements, right of way and encroachments. It records projections, variations, easements, boundary lines and is a legal representation of what the home buyer is actually purchasing. A survey is crucial when purchasing title insurance to protect the home buyer.


Why do home buyers need a survey?

The housing market collapse resulted in banks, lending companies, and property management companies receiving a huge volume of properties that they never intended to own and were not prepared to handle. Attorneys and courts were overwhelmed by the number of foreclosures they had to process. For paralegals and and other people in the process, it created mountains of paperwork and massive tangles of red tape (both digital and hard copy) that they had to work through quickly and under ongoing stress. To reduce costs, many essential aspects of proper land transfer were eliminated. These led to many properties being put back on the market with encroachments and other discrepancies in the legal description. Some properties that fell into foreclosure were situated on parcels that were part of large family-owned properties. Banks that made loans to construct homes on these parcels did not always make sure there was proper legal access in place. As a result, the people who purchased the homes from the bank had a costly and tiresome legal process to set things right and have legal access.
Differences between tax maps and survey lines is also a possibility. The property taxes a home owner pays are based on the the size of the property and what is included within the property boundaries. Too often, home buyers pull up tax maps or, even worse, some other online aerial view of property to determine property lines based on fences, trees, the amount of lawn mowed, or driveway locations. This method and taking the word of home sellers, agents, or neighbors is unreliable and will almost certainly lead to confusion and disputes at some time in the future. The only way for a home buyer to know what they are really buying and to protect their purchase is to have a survey done by a certified surveyor and have their own title insurance policy that is in addition to the policy required by lenders.

The cost of a survey

Surveyors typically charge based on how much time it takes to do the survey. Factors like terrain of the property, access to records and size of the parcel all influence the cost. Some surveys do not need a printed map of the property. It reduces costs if all the buyer needs is flags and corner markers. If the buyer uses the same surveyor who did the previous survey, it is typically less costly than hiring someone unfamiliar with the property. Buyers can also reduce the amount of time a surveyor will spend doing their field work by making sure property lines are clear. Much like title insurance, the initial cost is minimal compared to the value of the protection and peace of mind a survey provides.

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