Land is the foundation of every development decision, whether the objective is construction,...
When to Order a Location Drawing vs. a Boundary Surveyfor a Residential Transaction in Ohio
In Ohio residential transactions, the terms Mortgage Location Survey (MLS) and boundary survey are often used interchangeably. In practice, they are not the same thing, and Ohio law treats them very differently.
Understanding what each document is designed to do and where its limits are can help buyers, lenders, title professionals, and real estate agents avoid confusion and reduce risk during a transaction.
What Ohio Means by a “Mortgage Location Survey”
In Ohio, what many people casually call a location survey is typically a Mortgage Location Survey (MLS).
An MLS is a regulated survey product governed by Ohio's minimum standards. Its purpose is to provide the lender and title insurer with professional opinion evidence that the visible improvements on a property appear to be located on the parcel described in the mortgage.
In simple terms, it helps answer the question: “Do the house and other major improvements appear to sit on the described property, and are there any obvious red flags for lender or title risk?”
Ohio rules are clear that a Mortgage Location Survey:
- Is prepared for lender and title insurer decision-making
- Relies on the legal description furnished by the client
- Is based on a field investigation, including searching for monuments and visible evidence of occupation
- Must show major improvements, apparent encroachments, and relevant easement or setback information if provided
- Must include a clear statement that it is not a boundary survey
An MLS is not considered an improvement to the property, and it is not intended to establish property lines.
What a Boundary Survey Does
A boundary survey (or pin survey) serves a fundamentally different purpose.
It is the professional work used to establish or re-establish a property's legal boundaries. This process involves deeper research, analysis of boundary evidence, and fieldwork performed under Ohio’s boundary survey standards.
A boundary survey is designed to answer the question: “Where are the property lines, legally?”
Compared to a Mortgage Location Survey, a boundary survey typically involves:
- More extensive deed and record research
- Analysis of monuments, prior surveys, and occupation evidence
- Higher documentation and reconciliation requirements
- Boundary monumentation expectations that are materially different from an MLS
This type of survey is the appropriate tool when boundary certainty matters.
The Purpose Gap Between the Two
The cleanest way to understand the difference is by purpose.
A Mortgage Location Survey focuses on lender and title risk review for a residential transaction. It looks for visible issues that could affect insurability or financing.
A boundary survey focuses on defining property lines. It establishes where the boundary is, not just whether improvements appear to fall within it.
Because these purposes are different, one cannot substitute one for the other.
Ohio law reinforces this distinction by requiring that an MLS plat explicitly state that it is not a boundary survey.
When a Mortgage Location Survey Is the Wrong Tool
A Mortgage Location Survey is not appropriate when the real question is any of the following:
- Where exactly is the property line?
- Can I build a fence, addition, or other improvement near the boundary?
- Is my neighbor encroaching onto my property, or vice versa?
- I am purchasing acreage, a non-standard parcel, or land with unclear boundaries
In these situations, the MLS is the wrong product by design. The rules governing it do not allow it to answer boundary questions, even if it appears to show boundary lines on a plat.
Why This Distinction Matters in Ohio Transactions
Ohio’s standards exist to prevent misunderstanding. A Mortgage Location Survey serves an important role in many residential closings, but it is intentionally limited in scope.
Using the right survey product for the right purpose helps avoid:
- Misplaced reliance on documents not designed to establish boundaries
- Post-closing disputes over encroachments or lot lines
- Confusion during underwriting or future transactions
Understanding the distinction allows all parties to make informed decisions based on the actual risks involved in a transaction.
The Takeaway
In Ohio, a Mortgage Location Survey and a boundary survey are not interchangeable, even though they are often discussed as if they were.
A Mortgage Location Survey supports lender and title decision-making for a residential loan. A boundary survey establishes property lines.
Knowing which question you are trying to answer is the key to choosing the correct survey.