Land Surveying: Ethics of a Land Surveyor

land surveyorNot a lot of people realize that land surveying is actually a fusion of art and science. Yes, different equipment is available for the surveyor’s use, but the land surveyor still has the last say on the results.

Despite this though, a land surveyor still has several guidelines to follow. If you’ve had an experience with a dishonest surveyor, or are wary about hiring one, this article should be able to help you out.

What ethics should a land surveyor have?

A surveyor should always start a project with fairness in mind. Your client as well as everybody party involved in the project is expecting you to be fair and just so make the best possible assessment with the evidences handed to you.

Before a project commences, the surveyor assigned to the project should come forward if there’s a possibility of conflict of interest. This is very important to preserve their relationship with the client. A surveyor should avoid professional impropriety by declaring involvement or any prior affiliations with any of the involved parties. It is also the surveyor’s responsibility to keep any information regarding the project as well as the client confidential even after the project is done.

Several cases were reported where the surveyor overcharged the client. This usually happens when the client doesn’t know anything about land surveying. A land surveyor running his business with ethics will never do this. Fortunately, there are more honest land surveyors than dishonest ones.

A surveyor should charge a project according to the length of time needed to get it done as well as the level of technical complexity required for it. For the surveyor’s sake as well as the client, one should never sign plans, certificates or reports unless these are personally supervised by him. Not only is this unfair on the client’s side, doing so could put his reputation in danger should the results get disputed and he doesn’t know anything about them.

Just like with other industries, a land surveyor should never undermine the capability of other surveyors or the people from the land surveying industry.

New technologies come up for land surveying all the time. When a surveyor knows that a project is beyond his skills, he should tell the client about it. There’s no sense accepting a project only to come up with a subpar result. It will only hurt your business and your reputation.

Surveyors should also be responsible enough to study, do a thorough research, practice and utilize his skills before offering clients a new service. If a surveyor is new to flood determination, for instance, then he needs to make sure that he knows how to perform it before offering it to his clients.

Surveyors do not work alone. They usually have a staff to support them. The land surveyor needs to be responsible for their actions at all cost, for actions or work carried out by them.

author avatar
Surveyor

More Posts

Buyer reviewing a property boundary map during a due diligence survey before closing
boundary surveying
Surveyor

When a Due Diligence Survey Is Required—and When It’s Not

Buying property is a major decision. Whether you are purchasing vacant land, a commercial site, or property meant for future development, early mistakes can become expensive problems later. That is why many buyers rely on a due diligence survey. Still, confusion remains around when it is truly required and when

Read More »
Boundary line survey showing property corners clearly marked with stakes and paint near a residential fence
boundary surveying
Surveyor

When a Boundary Line Survey Is Required—And When It’s Not

Most property owners don’t think about boundaries until a project is already on the table. You might be planning a fence, a garage, or a new driveway. Maybe you’re clearing land or changing how you use your yard. At some point, the same question comes up: Do I really need

Read More »
A land surveyor measuring site conditions during early project planning
land surveyor
Surveyor

Land Surveyor Demand Is Shifting Due to Labor Gaps

If you have tried to schedule skilled services lately, you may have noticed longer wait times. Across Mississippi, a growing labor gap affects many licensed jobs. This includes the work of a land surveyor, especially in smaller cities like Tupelo. While most news stories focus on teachers and healthcare workers,

Read More »
Drone surveyor illustration showing a map overlay shift that represents GPS drift during noisy GNSS conditions
land surveyor
Surveyor

Drone Surveyor Routine to Prevent GPS Drift

If you hire a drone surveyor, you expect clean maps, solid contours, and coordinates you can trust. Most days, you get exactly that. However, some days feel strange. Your map lines up in one corner, then drifts in another. Your elevations look “almost right,” but not right enough. In those

Read More »
Aerial view of a neighborhood with a 2025 flood zone map overlay showing elevation lines and risk areas, highlighting the need for an elevation survey
flood damage
Surveyor

Why New Flood Maps Are Driving Up Elevation Survey Demand

Flood maps rarely make headlines. Yet the newest FEMA updates across Mississippi are causing homeowners and buyers to take a closer look at their flood risk. As the new maps roll out, many people are learning that their properties now fall in a different flood zone than before. Because of

Read More »
Aerial view of severe storm damage across a neighborhood, captured during drone surveying to help document roof loss and debris
land surveying
Surveyor

Why Storm Claims Now Require Drone Surveying

Mississippi has dealt with one storm after another in recent years, and every season brings stronger winds, heavier rain, and more property damage. Because claims keep rising, insurance companies want faster and clearer proof of what really happened on each property. That is why drone surveying is now one of

Read More »