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2026 ALTA/NSPS Survey Standards: What Real Estate Businesses Need to Know

Land title surveys may not be the first thing that comes to mind when thinking about business risk, but for companies that acquire, finance, develop, or lease real property, they are a foundational part of every transaction. The American Land Title Association (ALTA) and the National Society of Professional Surveyors (NSPS) recently updated their Minimum Standard Detail Requirements for ALTA/NSPS Land Title Surveys, effective February 23, 2026. These updates are not a complete overhaul, but they do introduce meaningful changes that affect how surveys are ordered, conducted, and relied upon in commercial real estate transactions.

The Standards Have Changed & Your Survey Requests Should Too

The 2026 standards supersede all prior versions as of their effective date. Any new survey ordered on or after February 23, 2026, must comply with the updated requirements. That sounds straightforward, but the practical implication is that standard survey request checklists, form contracts, and vendor instructions that reference the 2021 standards are now outdated. Businesses that routinely order surveys as part of acquisitions, financings, or development projects should revisit their templates and make sure they are specifying a “2026 ALTA/NSPS Land Title Survey,” not an older version.

The Biggest Change: A New Tool for Identifying Risk

The most significant update is the addition of Table A, Item 20. When included in a survey order, this new optional item requires the surveyor to prepare a summary table directly on the face of the survey identifying potential encroachments and other significant observed conditions. That includes encroachments over boundary lines, into easements or rights-of-way, and into setback areas, as well as situations where someone is using the property or accessing an adjacent parcel without the benefit of a recorded easement.

In the past, surveyors handled encroachments inconsistently. Some noted them, some did not. Some used one form of language, others used another. Title companies and counsel often had to hunt through the survey drawing themselves to piece together a picture of potential issues. Item 20 standardizes that process and puts the surveyor’s observations front and center in a format that buyers, lenders, and title insurers can actually use.

For commercial transactions in particular, this is a meaningful development. The surveyor is typically the only neutral party who physically visits the property, so their observations matter. Item 20 creates a reliable, standardized way to capture those observations and make them available to everyone at the table.

An important note: Item 20 is optional; it will not appear on every survey automatically. Businesses and their counsel should make a deliberate decision about whether to include it. In most commercial transactions, the answer should be yes.

Greater Transparency, More Detailed Surveys

Beyond Item 20, the 2026 standards require surveyors to be more transparent across the board. When discrepancies arise between recorded information and what was actually found in the field, between measured and record distances, or in how access or boundaries are established, surveyors must now explain those discrepancies with notes directly on the survey. That includes noting any verbal statements made by landowners or occupants about title or boundary issues. This additional layer of documentation surfaces potential issues earlier, reduces surprises at closing, and gives counsel and title insurers better information to work with.

Surveyors Now Bear More Research Responsibility

The 2026 standards also shift certain research responsibilities more squarely onto the surveyor. Under the prior standards, surveyors could rely on title insurers to provide descriptions of adjoining properties. That requirement has been removed. Surveyors are now responsible for obtaining that information themselves.

At the same time, the standards make clear that when a title commitment is not available, the surveyor and insurer may need to conduct additional research depending on state law. The practical takeaway for businesses is that providing complete, current title documentation to your surveyor at the outset of a project is more important than ever. Delays in getting that information to the surveyor translate directly into delays in completing the survey.

Aerial and Remote Imagery Is Now Formally Recognized

The 2026 standards replace the prior requirement that surveys be performed “on the ground” with language allowing fieldwork to be performed using “practices generally recognized as acceptable by the surveying profession.” That opens the door to aerial imagery, satellite data, photogrammetry, and other remote sensing technologies, but with an important guardrail. The surveyor must agree with the client in writing on what imagery will be used, discuss the accuracy and limitations of that approach with the insurer, lender, and client before work begins, and disclose the details on the face of the survey. For businesses, this means faster and potentially less costly surveys in some circumstances.

Coordination Between Surveyors and Title Companies Is Now a Formal Expectation

One theme running through the 2026 updates is closer coordination between surveyors and title insurers. Surveyors are now required to notify the title insurer if they discover recorded easements that were not listed in the title materials, so the insurer can determine whether those easements are still active and should be shown on the survey. The standards also clarify the circumstances under which an easement may be considered terminated, not just through a recorded release, but through other legal mechanisms as well.

Using Surveys Responsibly Is Part of Managing Real Estate Risk

A survey is only as useful as the information you draw from it. The 2026 updates are designed to make surveys more informative, more consistent, and more transparent. That is good news for buyers, lenders, and counsel, but it also means there is more to pay attention to when a survey comes in. Businesses that treat surveys as a box to check, rather than a substantive risk management tool, may miss issues that the updated standards were specifically designed to surface.

Working with experienced real estate counsel to review your survey practices, update your standard form requests, and evaluate what you see in survey deliverables can help you get the most out of these changes, and avoid being caught off guard by them.

How We Can Help

If you have questions about how the 2026 ALTA/NSPS standards affect your real estate transactions, whether your current survey practices need to be updated, or how to structure your survey requests and vendor instructions going forward, now is a good time to address them. The standards are already in effect, and the transactions you are working on today are subject to them.

For more information, or to seek counsel from our Real Estate & Construction practice group, please reach out to request a consultation or call us at 216-696-1422.

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This information is provided for general informational purposes only and should not be construed as legal advice. Readers should consult with qualified legal counsel regarding their specific circumstances before taking any action based on the information presented.

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