Lot Survey Problems That Can Delay a Closing on Older Homes

A lot survey on an older home often finds problems that no one knew existed. That’s not a flaw in the process. That’s the process working. The issue is that many buyers and developers don’t order the survey early enough to deal with what it finds before the closing date.
Older homes carry decades of changes. Owners added structures. Neighbors made informal agreements. Subdivision plats got amended. None of that always made it into the official record. When a lot survey finally connects the dots, what comes back can stop a closing cold.
When the Legal Description Doesn’t Match the Plat
Older properties often have legal descriptions written decades ago, sometimes before the subdivision plat was finalized or before a replat occurred. When a surveyor compares the deed’s legal description to the recorded plat, those two documents sometimes disagree.
This matters for the title. A title company can’t insure what it can’t confirm. If the deed says one thing and the plat says another, the title officer has a problem to resolve before the closing can move forward. That resolution can take days or weeks, depending on how far back the discrepancy goes and what county records show.
Buyers who find this issue the week before closing have no good options. Buyers who find it six weeks out can work with the title company and a surveyor to get it corrected before the date.
Unrecorded Agreements Between Prior Owners
Older neighborhoods generate informal agreements. Two neighbors in 1978 might have agreed to share a driveway, plant a hedge on a specific line, or allow a structure to sit across the boundary. They shook hands. Nobody recorded anything.
Decades later, a lot survey finds physical evidence of that agreement on the ground: a shared paved surface, a structure sitting on the line, or a fence that doesn’t match any recorded easement. The current owners may have no knowledge of how it started.
This becomes a title problem because an unrecorded agreement can affect the property’s legal use. The title company needs to know whether that shared surface is a formal easement or a trespass before it can insure the transfer. Sorting it out requires tracking down prior ownership records, and sometimes it requires a new recorded easement agreement between current neighbors.
Neither of those things happens quickly. And neither happens at all if the lot survey isn’t ordered until the week of closing.
How Subdivision Replats Change Original Lot Dimensions
Many older subdivisions went through replats after their original recording. A replat is a formal re-division of land that creates new lot lines, new easements, or new common areas. When a replat happens, the original lot dimensions change.
The problem is that not every property record gets updated to reflect the replat. Some deeds still reference the original plat. Some county records show conflicting information between the original filing and the amended one. When a surveyor finds that the lot the buyer is purchasing was actually re-dimensioned in a replat from the 1980s or 1990s, the legal description in the current deed may be inaccurate.
Fixing this requires a title search that goes far enough back to find the replat, then a correction to the deed or at minimum a written acknowledgment in the title commitment. That work pushes the timeline.
Structures That Sit Outside the Recorded Lot Lines
Older homes frequently have additions, carports, sheds, and patios built without permits and without survey verification. The homeowner assumed the structure was on their property. It may not be.
When a lot survey finds that a structure sits partly or fully outside the recorded lot lines, the closing has a real problem. The buyer is about to purchase a property with an improvement that encroaches onto a neighboring parcel or an easement. Lenders typically won’t close on a property with an unresolved encroachment. Title companies won’t insure it without an exception.
Resolving this means either removing the structure, getting a recorded boundary line agreement with the affected neighbor, or negotiating an exception in the title policy. None of those options close quickly. And all of them require the survey to have been ordered early enough to leave time to negotiate.
What Happens to the Timeline When Survey Problems Surface Late
A lot survey ordered two to three weeks before closing gives the transaction almost no room. Most of the problems described above take two to four weeks to resolve on their own, even when all parties cooperate. When they surface at the last minute, the closing gets pushed.
A pushed closing isn’t just an inconvenience. Rate locks expire. Movers get rescheduled. Leases end. Every party in the transaction feels it.
The survey is the right tool for finding these problems. The timing is what determines whether finding them helps or hurts the transaction.
Frequently Asked Questions
What Is a Lot Survey and Why Is It Important for Older Homes?
A lot survey confirms the legal boundaries of a parcel and compares the physical conditions on the ground to the recorded deed and plat. On older homes, it often finds discrepancies between documents and site conditions that title companies need to resolve before they can insure the transfer.
What Issues Can Cause a Lot Survey to Delay Closing?
Common causes include conflicts between the legal description and the recorded plat, unrecorded agreements between prior owners, changes made by subdivision replats, and structures that sit outside the recorded lot lines. Each of these requires title review and sometimes recorded corrections before closing can proceed.
When Should a Lot Survey Be Ordered for an Older Home?
Order it within the first two weeks of going under contract. Problems found on older properties often take two to four weeks to resolve. Finding them early gives the transaction time to work through title issues without pushing the closing date.
Can a Lender Require a Lot Survey Before Closing?
Yes. Many lenders require a survey as a condition of the loan, especially on older properties or in transactions where the title commitment shows exceptions that need to be cleared. In some cases, lenders won’t close until an encroachment or boundary conflict gets resolved.
What Happens If a Structure Is Found Outside the Lot Lines?
The title company typically can’t insure the encroachment without a resolution. Options include removing the structure, getting a recorded boundary line agreement with the affected neighbor, or accepting a title policy exception. Each path takes time and needs to be addressed before the closing date.
For a free land surveying quote, call us at (954) 519-7803 or send us a message by going here.
