Ordering an ALTA Survey This Month? Read This First

Licensed land surveyor performing an alta survey using a total station at a commercial property site

If you’re ordering an ALTA survey this month, timing matters more than most buyers and lenders realize. Many people think a survey works the same way every year. However, survey standards do change — and when they do, the way your survey gets written, certified, and accepted can change too.

So if you’re under contract, refinancing, or preparing for a commercial closing, you should not just “order and forget.” Instead, you should understand what’s different right now and how it affects your deal.

Why This Month Is Different for ALTA Survey Orders

Most property buyers assume an ALTA survey follows one fixed format. In reality, ALTA survey standards update from time to time. When a new version takes effect, surveyors adjust their certification language, notes, and reporting structure.

That means two surveys completed in different years can look similar on the map — but still follow different standards on paper.

Now, that detail might sound small. However, lenders and title reviewers often check those certification details closely. If your survey references an older standards version, your lender may ask for an update. As a result, that can create extra steps late in your closing timeline.

Therefore, when you order an ALTA survey during a standards transition period, you should confirm exactly which version your survey will follow.

The “Standards Version” Detail Most Buyers Miss

Professional reviewing documents and plans during an alta survey certification and standards check

Every ALTA survey includes a certification statement. That statement does more than show the surveyor’s name and seal. It also names the standards used to perform the work.

In other words, it tells lenders and title companies: “This survey follows the current national rules.”

However, if someone orders a survey using an old template or an old request form, the certification wording may not match the newest standards. Even if the fieldwork looks fine, the paperwork can still raise questions.

Consequently, reviewers may pause approval until the certification updates. That pause can cost days — sometimes longer — depending on workload and scheduling.

So while buyers focus on boundaries and buildings, lenders often focus on certification language and standards dates.

Why Reusing Old Order Forms Can Backfire

Here’s something that happens more often than people expect. A broker, attorney, or project manager pulls out a past ALTA survey request and reuses it. The form looks correct. The scope sounds right. So they send it in.

However, that form may reference outdated standards wording.

At first, no one notices. The surveyor starts the job. Field crews collect data. Drafting begins. Then later, during the title review, someone spots the mismatch.

Now the team must update certification language or issue a revised deliverable.

That creates friction — not because the survey is wrong — but because the template came from the wrong standards year.

Therefore, even if you ordered ALTA surveys before, you should not assume your old forms still fit today’s requirements.

Deliverables May Not Match Older ALTA Survey Copies

Many clients compare their new ALTA survey to one from a past deal. That makes sense — but it can also cause confusion.

For example, you might notice:

  • different note wording
  • updated certification blocks
  • revised reference statements
  • slightly different report language

That does not mean the new survey includes errors. Instead, it often means the standards changed and the format adjusted.

So rather than comparing line-by-line with an old PDF, you should ask whether the survey meets current standards. That answer matters more than visual similarity.

How Version Mismatch Creates Closing Risk

Let’s look at a simple real-world scenario.

A buyer orders an ALTA survey early in the deal. Everything moves forward smoothly. Then the lender updates its checklist during underwriting. Now the checklist requires certification under the newest standards version.

Unfortunately, the survey references the prior version.

At that point, the lender asks for updated certification. The surveyor must review, revise wording, and reissue files. If the surveyor has a heavy workload, that revision may take several days.

Meanwhile, the closing date approaches.

Nothing about the boundary changed. Nothing about the fieldwork failed. Still, paperwork timing created risk.

That’s why standard version checks matter most during active transactions.

Smart Questions to Ask Before You Order

Instead of guessing, you can solve this early with a short conversation. A five-minute call often prevents days of delay.

Ask questions like:

  • Which standard version will this ALTA survey follow?
  • Will the certification match current lender expectations?
  • Do you use updated certification language?
  • If closing moves later, will recertification require changes?
  • Do you coordinate certification wording with title companies?

These are not technical questions. They are practical transaction questions. Good survey firms answer them quickly.

Why This Matters More for Active Deals and Refinances

Timing issues affect some deals more than others. For instance, refinances and commercial purchases often move fast once underwriting starts. At that stage, checklist changes can appear without much warning.

Therefore, surveys ordered during that window need extra alignment between surveyor, lender, and title team.

Minneapolis and Twin Cities commercial activity stays strong right now. Many closings move through the pipeline at the same time. Because of that, even small paperwork mismatches can create review backlogs.

Early version verification keeps your file clean and moving.

A Quick Scope Check Saves Real Time

You don’t need a long planning meeting to avoid these problems. Instead, you just need a quick scope and standards check before kickoff.

Share your lender name. Share your timeline. Ask about the certification version. Confirm the standards reference. That’s it.

When everyone aligns early, the survey flows through review with fewer questions. As a result, your closing stays on track.

Final Thoughts

Ordering an ALTA survey this month still makes perfect sense. You don’t need to delay your project or worry about rule changes. However, you should order with awareness.

Standards versions, certification wording, and template accuracy now matter more than many clients expect. Fortunately, you can manage all of that with one short pre-order conversation.

So before you submit your request, confirm the standards version, verify certification language, and align with your lender. That small step protects your timeline and keeps your transaction moving forward with confidence.

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Surveyor

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