
Many property owners first hear about an as-built survey at the worst time, right before a closing or a loan sign-off. Knowing what it is and when you need one can save you time, money, and a lot of stress.
What Is an As-Built Survey?
An as-built survey is done after construction ends. It records exactly where buildings, pipes, and other improvements were placed on the property. It checks the finished work against the original approved plans. Lenders, title companies, and city offices all use it as the official record of what was built.
Buildings do not always go up exactly as planned. A wall might end up a few inches closer to the property line. A pipe might get rerouted during installation. A foundation might shift slightly during pouring. An as-built survey measures all of these changes and puts them on the official record.
In Chicago, only a licensed Illinois Professional Land Surveyor, called a PLS, can sign and certify an as-built survey. That signature makes the survey a legal document you can use for permits, insurance, and loans.
How Is It Different from a Construction Survey?
A construction survey happens before or during the build. It places stakes and markers in the ground to guide workers on where to build.
An as-built survey happens after the build is finished. It measures where everything actually ended up.
One tells workers where to go. The other checks where they landed.
What Does an As-Built Survey Record?
A certified as-built survey records:
- The building’s size and exact location on the lot
- Floor and ground elevations
- Water, sewer, gas, and electric lines as they were installed
- Driveways, parking areas, and walkways
- Drainage and grading as finished
- Any part of the building that crossed a property line or setback
- Distances from all structures to all lot lines
When Do You Need an As-Built Survey?
You need an as-built survey when your lender asks for proof before releasing money, when a title company needs to update your insurance, when the city requires it to close out your building permit, or when you sell a property after building or major renovation work.
Your Lender or Title Company Asks for One
Most construction lenders want a certified as-built survey before they release the final loan payment. They need to confirm that what was built matches what they agreed to fund.
Title companies also need them. The 2026 ALTA/NSPS Land Title Survey standards, published by two major national groups, require as-built records for several key items on a property. Without one, a title company may not be able to fully cover the property with insurance.
The City of Chicago Requires One for Permit Close-Out
The Chicago Department of Buildings handles more than 40,000 building permits every year. For most commercial projects, the city will not issue a Certificate of Occupancy without certified as-built documents. A Certificate of Occupancy is the legal permission to use or rent a building. No survey means no certificate, and no certificate means the building sits empty.
After a Major Renovation
Big renovation projects often need an as-built survey too. This is especially true if the work changed the building’s shape, added space, or touched pipes and lines near city property. Under Illinois law, specifically the Illinois Plat Act (765 ILCS 205), any land split must be signed off by a licensed surveyor using current, accurate as-built data.
Who Needs an As-Built Survey?
Developers, contractors, lenders, title companies, buyers, homeowners, architects, and city agencies all use as-built surveys. They confirm that construction was done correctly and in the right place.
Here is a simple breakdown:
- Developers need one to close out loans and get the Certificate of Occupancy
- Contractors need one to prove the job was completed as agreed
- Lenders need one to confirm the building is worth what they financed
- Title companies need one to issue or update property insurance
- Buyers need one to confirm the property matches what they are paying for
- City agencies need one to approve work done in or near public streets and alleys
How Much Does an As-Built Survey Cost?
In Chicago, an as-built survey costs between $800 and $2,500 for a home. For a commercial project, costs run from $3,000 to $15,000 or more. The final price depends on the lot size, the number of structures, and how detailed the report needs to be.
The price also goes up if the job needs utility mapping, ALTA certification, or a fast turnaround.
Here is why the cost is worth it. The American Institute of Architects says that fixing mistakes caused by building errors costs the U.S. construction industry about $177 billion every year. The Construction Industry Institute also found that projects using a post-construction survey catch up to 23% more errors than those that rely only on contractor reports. Catching one mistake early is almost always cheaper than fixing it after the fact.
Why Chicago Specifically Needs This Survey
Chicago lots are narrow. In neighborhoods like River North, Pilsen, and the South Loop, buildings sit close together. Alleys run through the back of properties. Easements are common. In this kind of environment, even a small error during construction can cause big problems.
A structure built a few inches off from the plan can:
- Cross a neighbor’s property line and lead to a lawsuit
- Break a Chicago zoning setback rule
- Block a neighbor’s legal access to their property
- Cause water to drain the wrong way into city infrastructure
An as-built survey gives you a certified record that your project stayed inside the legal lines. If a dispute ever comes up, you have proof.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is an as-built survey the same as as-built drawings?
No. As-built drawings are notes and markups made by the contractor or architect showing what changed during the build. An as-built survey is a legal document signed by a licensed land surveyor. Only the survey holds up in court, at the bank, or with the city.
Do I need one for an interior remodel?
Usually not. If your project did not change the outside of the building, add new space, or touch pipes near city property, you probably do not need one. Check with the Chicago Department of Buildings if you are not sure.
Can it find hidden problems?
Yes. If a wall, fence, or foundation was built too close to a property line, the survey will catch it. Finding that before you sell is much better than finding it at the closing table.





