Easement Access Survey

Easement and Access Surveys in Kitsap County

DC Surveying maps easements and access for property owners across Kitsap County and the surrounding area.

From our office in Poulsbo, we serve Silverdale, Bremerton, Kingston, Seabeck, Port Orchard, Port Ludlow, Bainbridge Island, and the Northern Hood Canal.

Shared driveways, private roads, and beach paths are part of daily life here, and knowing where those rights run protects your plans..

How are Easements Defined?

Easements and access rights can be hard to understand just by reading title documents. The paperwork may say a neighbor, utility company, or nearby property owner has the right to use part of your land, but it may not be clear where that area is on the ground.

An easement and access survey helps connect the legal record to the real property. It can show a shared driveway, private road, beach path, utility route, or other access area in relation to your boundary lines.

This type of survey is useful for homeowners, vacant land buyers, farm owners, waterfront owners, and anyone with shared roads or private access. It can help you understand what parts of the land may need to stay open and what areas may be affected before you build, fence, sell, or make changes.

What does an easement survey show?

Recorded easements plotted in their true location
Your property lines and corners
Driveways, roads, and paths as they are actually used
Visible utilities such as poles, meters, and manholes
Fences, buildings, and other features inside easement areas
Gaps between what the documents say and what exists on the ground
Shoreline, tideland, river and beach access

Common easement types in Greater Kitsap County

Easement typeWhat it does
Utility easementLets power, water, sewer, or communication lines cross the land
Access or road easementGives a rear parcel the right to reach a public road, common on rural land
Shared drivewayLets two or more homes use one driveway, frequent on older plats
Beach or tideland easementGives upland owners a path to the shore along bodies of water including lakes, rivers, streams and along Puget Sound
Drainage easementCarries stormwater across a property
Open space or native growth areaLimits clearing and building to protect wetlands, steep slopes, and trees

When do you need an easement or access survey?

You may need an easement or access survey any time another person, neighbor, or utility company has the right to use part of your land. You may also need one if your property depends on access across someone else’s land.

For homeowners, this often comes up when buying a home on a private road, sharing a driveway, building a fence, or planning an addition near an easement. A survey can help show what areas need to remain open for access, utilities, or shared use.

For vacant land buyers here in Kitsap, Mason, and Jefferson counties, this can be very important before closing. Some rural parcels do not touch a public road. An easement or access survey can help confirm how the property is reached and whether the access shown in legal documents matches what is being used on the ground.

For commercial and development projects, these surveys are often used before buying, building, extending utilities, or creating new lots. They can help avoid access problems before a project moves too far forward. Contact DC Surveying and we can go over in greater detail your needs and offer the best solution.

Other Easement Surveying Questions We Commonly Get:

Creating a new easement

If you need to grant or receive an easement, we survey the strip, write the legal description, and prepare the exhibit map that records with the agreement. Attorneys and title companies rely on these documents to record a valid easement. DC Surveying can also stake the easement so everyone can see it on the ground.

Local knowledge matters

Many Kitsap, Jefferson, or Mason County parcels trace back to old plats, handshake road agreements, and beach paths used for decades. DC Surveying pulls the county records, and our team find the evidence in the field, from old fence lines to gravel roads that never made it into writing. That mix of research and field work is what settles access questions.

Contact DC Surveying Today

If you have any question or need more information about easements and the surveying process fill out our contact form or give DC Surveying a call.