How to Order a Survey Plan for Boundary Verification in NZ
Whether you're building a fence, resolving a boundary dispute, or preparing for a property purchase, knowing exactly where your boundaries lie is essential. In New Zealand, a Survey Plan (also known as a cadastral survey plan or title plan) is the official document that defines property boundaries — and ordering one is easier than most people think.
This guide explains what a survey plan shows, when you need one, and how to order the right type for your situation.
What Is a Survey Plan?
A survey plan is a detailed technical drawing prepared by a licensed cadastral surveyor and deposited with New Zealand's official land registry. It shows:
- Property boundaries — exact positions, bearings, and distances
- Area — the total land area of the parcel
- Boundary marks — pegs, pins, or other physical markers placed by the surveyor
- Easement locations — areas subject to rights of way, drainage, or utility access
- Adjoining parcels — identifiers for neighbouring properties
- Road frontages — where the property meets legal roads
Survey plans are part of the public land record and are referenced on your Record of Title. When someone asks "where exactly is my boundary?", the survey plan is the definitive answer.
When You Need a Survey Plan
Before Building or Renovating
If you're planning to build close to a boundary — a new house, extension, garage, or even a fence — you need to know exactly where that boundary is. Building over a boundary can lead to disputes, costly rectification, and even orders to remove the structure. A survey plan lets you confirm setbacks and comply with council requirements.
When Buying Property
Smart buyers order a survey plan as part of their due diligence, especially for properties with large sections, unusual shapes, or potential boundary issues. It confirms the land you're buying matches what's on the title — and that fences, driveways, and structures are actually within the correct boundaries.
During Boundary Disputes
If you and a neighbour disagree about where the boundary lies, a survey plan provides the objective, official reference. Combined with the Record of Title, it's the evidence that resolves disputes — or confirms that a professional resurvey is needed if existing marks are unclear.
For Subdivision Applications
Subdivision always requires a new survey by a licensed cadastral surveyor. But before engaging one, ordering the existing survey plan gives you and your surveyor a clear starting point — showing current boundaries, dimensions, and any easement areas that need to be considered.
Types of Survey Documents Available
Cadastral Survey Plan (Title Sheet)
This is the standard survey plan showing your property's boundaries, area, and easement areas as deposited with the land registry. It's the document most people need for boundary verification, building consent applications, and general property due diligence.
You can order a Survey Plan for $49.90 NZD, which includes the title sheet showing the current deposited plan.
Record of Title with Diagram
The Record of Title with Diagram includes a simplified version of the survey plan embedded in the title document. It's useful for seeing your property's shape and boundaries alongside ownership information, encumbrances, and other title details.
Order a Record of Title with Diagram for $42.90 NZD when you need both the title details and a visual overview of the property boundaries.
What to Check on Your Survey Plan
Once you receive your survey plan, here's what to focus on:
Boundary Dimensions
Check that the boundary lengths match what you expect based on your property's title and physical features. Significant discrepancies may indicate encroachment or an outdated plan.
Area Calculation
The survey plan states the parcel area in hectares or square metres. Cross-reference this with the area shown on your Record of Title — they should match.
Easement Areas
Easements are shown as hatched or coloured areas on the plan. Check that any right of way, drainage, or utility easements visible on the ground correspond to what's recorded on the plan.
Boundary Marks
The plan will reference the type and position of boundary marks (pegs, pins, or permanent marks). If these marks can't be found on the ground, a resurvey may be needed — especially for older properties where marks can shift or be disturbed over time.
Survey Plan vs Physical Survey: What's the Difference?
A deposited survey plan is a historical record — it shows the boundaries as they were when the survey was completed. If you need to confirm where your boundaries are today, you may need a licensed cadastral surveyor to physically locate or replace boundary marks on the ground.
Ordering the survey plan first is the smart move because:
- It tells you what boundaries should exist and where marks were placed
- It gives your surveyor the reference they need to locate or re-establish boundaries
- It's a fraction of the cost of a full resurvey
- Many boundary questions are answered by the plan alone — no resurvey needed
For more detail on interpreting survey plans, see our guide on how to read a survey plan in New Zealand.
What Else to Order with Your Survey Plan
For a complete picture, consider ordering these documents alongside your survey plan:
- Record of Title with Diagram — confirms ownership and all registered interests (easements, covenants, mortgages) alongside the boundary plan
- Instruments — the full text of any easements or covenants shown on the plan, including their specific terms and conditions. Order instruments for $39.90 NZD
- Legal Owner Search — if you need to identify the current owner of an adjoining property (for a fencing notice, for example). Order a Legal Owner Search for $65.90 NZD
For buyers doing comprehensive due diligence, the Pre-Purchase Due Diligence Package ($189.90 NZD) bundles the Record of Title, survey plan, instruments, and more — everything you need in one order.
Common Boundary Issues a Survey Plan Reveals
Ordering a survey plan can uncover issues that aren't obvious from walking the property:
- Encroachments — a neighbour's fence, structure, or driveway that crosses the boundary
- Missing easements — an access way or drain that exists on the ground but isn't recorded on the title or plan
- Area discrepancies — the physical section is smaller or larger than what the title states
- Unmarked boundaries — boundary pegs that have been removed, moved, or never placed
Catching these issues before you buy, build, or invest can save thousands of dollars in legal fees and remediation costs.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does it take to receive a survey plan?
When ordered through Certificate of Title NZ, survey plans are typically delivered within 1-2 business days as a digital document. This is much faster than arranging a physical resurvey, which can take weeks.
Can I use a survey plan to settle a boundary dispute with my neighbour?
A deposited survey plan is the official record of your boundaries and carries significant weight in any dispute. However, if boundary marks on the ground are unclear or disputed, you may need a licensed cadastral surveyor to re-establish the boundary and place new marks. The survey plan is the starting point — the surveyor uses it to confirm where marks should be.
What if my property boundaries don't match what's on the survey plan?
If fences, structures, or natural features on the ground don't align with the survey plan, this could indicate encroachment, historical boundary agreements, or simply that boundary marks have shifted. Start by ordering the survey plan and Record of Title, then consult a licensed surveyor if the discrepancy needs resolution. For more on this topic, see our guide on how to find property boundaries in New Zealand.