Who Pays for a Land Survey: Buyer or Seller?
There is no single rule about who pays for a land survey. In most home purchases, the buyer covers the cost, especially when a lender requires one. That said, survey fees are fully negotiable and can be assigned to either party in the purchase contract. Local customs also play a role, and they vary from state to state.
If you are about to buy or sell property and the question of survey costs has come up, you are not alone. It is one of the most common points of confusion during real estate negotiations. The good news is that the answer is more flexible than most buyers and sellers expect.
The General Rule: Buyers Usually Pay
In most residential real estate transactions in the United States, the buyer is responsible for paying the survey fee. This is especially true when the buyer’s mortgage lender requires a survey as a condition of loan approval. The cost typically appears on the buyer’s closing disclosure under settlement fees.
When a lender requires a survey before approving a mortgage, that requirement falls on the borrower, which is the buyer. The survey fee is then listed on the Loan Estimate and the Closing Disclosure, two documents the buyer receives before and at closing.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau classifies survey fees as allowable closing costs on both conventional and FHA loan transactions. This means the fee can be folded into the total amount due at closing rather than paid out of pocket in advance, depending on how the transaction is structured.
That said, the fact that buyers usually pay does not mean they have to. It simply means that if no one negotiates otherwise, the buyer pays by default.
When the Seller Pays
A seller may pay for a land survey as a negotiating tool, as a goodwill gesture, or because a buyer requests it as a condition of the offer. In some states, it is common practice for sellers to provide a current survey upfront. Sellers can also cover the cost through closing cost concessions.
There are several situations where the seller ends up covering the survey fee.
The seller offers a recent survey. In states like Texas and Florida, it is common practice for sellers to provide buyers with a copy of an existing survey early in the transaction. This saves time and can make the listing more attractive. If the survey is recent and no changes have been made to the property since it was completed, the buyer’s lender may accept it without ordering a new one.
The buyer requests it in the offer. A buyer can include a line in the purchase offer asking the seller to pay for a new survey. This is a reasonable request, especially in a buyer’s market where sellers are competing for attention. According to a 2023 National Association of Realtors report, 41 percent of accepted offers included some form of seller concession toward closing costs, which can include survey fees.
The seller offers concessions. Even if the survey is not specifically mentioned, a buyer can negotiate a seller credit toward closing costs and apply part of that credit to the survey fee. On conventional loans, Fannie Mae guidelines allow sellers to contribute between 3 and 9 percent of the purchase price toward buyer closing costs, depending on the down payment amount.
How Survey Costs Are Handled at Closing
Most buyers who pay for a survey do not write a check directly to the surveyor. The fee is collected as part of the closing process instead.
Here is how it typically works:
- The buyer orders the survey after going under contract, usually at the direction of their lender or agent.
- The surveyor completes the work and submits an invoice.
- The fee is added to the buyer’s closing disclosure as a settlement service charge.
- The amount is paid at the closing table, either directly or through the title company.
If the seller has agreed to pay the fee, it appears as a seller-paid closing cost on the settlement statement, reducing the seller’s net proceeds.
What Happens in a Cash Purchase
When no lender is involved, no one is required to order a survey. Both parties can close without one. In practice, most experienced cash buyers still order a survey independently because the protection it provides does not depend on whether a bank requires it.
In a cash transaction, survey responsibility can be negotiated just like any other closing cost. Some cash buyers ask the seller to provide a current survey as a condition of the offer. Others prefer to hire their own surveyor to control the timeline and confirm the work meets their standard.
Negotiating Survey Costs: Tips for Both Parties
For buyers:
- Ask your agent whether the seller has a current survey on file before ordering a new one. If it meets your lender’s requirements, you may be able to use it at no cost.
- Include survey responsibility in your initial offer. It is easier to negotiate before a contract is signed than to raise it later.
- If the seller agrees to cover closing costs, confirm in writing that the survey fee is part of that agreement.
For sellers:
- Providing a recent survey upfront signals transparency and removes one obstacle from the buyer’s checklist.
- Offering to cover the survey in a slow market is a low-cost concession that can help close a deal that might otherwise stall.
- If you order the survey before listing, keep a copy of the surveyor’s credentials and the date of completion. Buyers and lenders will ask for both.
Does Survey Cost Affect Your Taxes?
Survey fees paid during a home purchase are generally not directly tax deductible for a primary residence. However, the IRS allows buyers to add settlement costs, including survey fees, to the cost basis of the property. A higher cost basis reduces the taxable gain when the property is eventually sold.
For investment properties or commercial real estate, survey costs may be deductible as a business expense in the year they are incurred. A tax professional can advise on the right treatment based on how the property is used.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can survey costs be rolled into my mortgage?
Survey fees are closing costs, and closing costs can sometimes be rolled into certain loan types, depending on the program and lender guidelines. Ask your loan officer whether your specific loan allows it.
What if the buyer and seller both want the other to pay?
This is a negotiation point like any other in a real estate transaction. If neither party wants to absorb the cost, a common resolution is to split the fee. Your real estate agent can help broker an agreement that keeps the deal moving forward.
Should I use the seller’s survey or order my own?
If the seller’s survey is recent and your lender accepts it, using it saves time and money. If it is old or changes have been made to the property, ordering a fresh one is the safer choice.

