Large Lot Subdividing in Kitsap, Jefferson & Mason Counties
DC Surveying handles large lot subdivisions for acreage 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 along the shores of Hood Canal.
If you own rural acreage and want to divide it into big parcels, this process is often simpler and faster than a standard plat.
What is and/or Involve Large Subdivision of Lots ?
Large lot division may be an option if you have a larger property and want to split it into separate parcels. In Washington, this process often applies when the new lots are around five acres or larger. The exact size can change a little because the law is tied to survey section measurements.
This type of land division is often simpler than a full subdivision. It may work well for landowners who want to keep one lot, sell another, or create separate parcels for family members. Kitsap, Mason, and Jefferson counties still require proper review, a licensed surveyor (like DC Surveying), recorded maps, and legal descriptions. However, because these lots are larger and usually place less pressure on public services, the process is often lighter and faster than a full plat.
What does the process include?
Large lot subdivision at a glance
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Minimum lot size | About five acres, based on the survey section grid |
| Who reviews it | County staff, through a simplified process |
| Survey required | Yes, prepared and recorded by a licensed surveyor |
| Access | Every lot needs legal access to a road |
| Water, Sewer, and septic | Buildable lots need a water source, septic or sewage plan |
| Speed | Faster and less costly than a short or long plat |
Why divide into large lots?
Families of Kitsap and Jefferson Counties use large lot subdivisions to carve home sites out of acreage and other rural areas, to pass land to children, or to sell part of a property while keeping the rest. Sellers often find that two or three five-acre parcels bring more total value than one big tract.
On the commercial side, investors and timberland owners divide acreage into salable parcels, and buyers of large tracts use the process to shape a purchase. Each new lot still needs legal access and a realistic path to water and septic if anyone plans to build.
Common questions We Received Regarding Subdividing Land:
Generally about five acres or more. The legal test uses fractions of a survey section, and land out to the center line of a bordering road can count toward the size. We can confirm how the rule applies to your parcel.
A short plat is limited by the number of lots. A large lot subdivision is defined by the size of the lots, and its review is usually simpler.
Lot size, not lot count, is the main test. Local code and your zoning set any other limits, and we can check both for your land.
Yes. A licensed surveyor prepares the map, sets the corner monuments, and records the final document with the county.
Any lot someone plans to build on does. Wells and septic systems are the norm in rural Kitsap, and soil conditions decide what will pass.
Every lot needs legal access to a public road, often by way of a private road or easement. County road standards can apply as lots are added.
Usually a few months from survey to recording, and faster than a short or long plat. Septic testing and critical area studies add time when they are needed.
It depends on the acreage, the terrain, and the research involved. Call us with your parcel number for a clear quote.
Yes, but dividing below the large lot size threshold moves you into short plat or full subdivision rules, with more review.
It can. Removing land from those programs may trigger back taxes, so check with the county assessor or your tax advisor before you record.
Local knowledge matters
Rural land in Kitsap Mason, and Jefferson counties comes with its own checklist: private road agreements, well and septic feasibility, wetlands, steep slopes, and streams. Land enrolled in the timber or open space tax programs can also face back taxes when it is divided, so a talk with the assessor or your tax advisor pays off.
The team here at DC Surveying works handles surveying requests with rural land and acreage frequently and can flag potential issues a ahead of time before they cost you money.
Request Large Subdivision Lot Information
Own acreage in Kitsap, Jefferson or Mason Counties? Request more information or give DC Surveying a call. Centrally located in Poulsbo, DC Surveying will review your parcel, explain what the large lot rules allow, and give you a clear price and timeline.