
What Is a Survey Exception in Title Insurance?
"Texas, often referred to as the Lone Star State, is a thriving hub for economic growth and innovation, making it an attractive destination for commercial real estate investment." - Chris Evans
What Is a Survey Exception in Title Insurance?
When reviewing a title commitment for a commercial property, you may see something called a survey exception.
It’s easy to overlook — but it’s actually a big deal.
What Is a Survey Exception?
A survey exception is a clause in a title insurance policy that says:
The title company is not covering issues that a survey would reveal.
This can include things like:
Boundary discrepancies
Encroachments
Easements not clearly documented
Access issues
In other words, if a problem exists on the land and no survey was done, the title company may not insure against it.
Why Title Companies Include Survey Exceptions
Title companies rely on recorded documents — not physical inspections of the property.
Without a current survey, they can’t verify:
Where boundaries actually fall
Whether structures cross property lines
If easements affect usability
So they protect themselves by adding a survey exception.
How a Survey Can Remove the Exception
When a current, professional survey is provided, title companies can review it and often remove or modify the survey exception.
This gives buyers:
Greater protection
More clarity about the property
Reduced risk after closing
It’s one of the main reasons surveys are so important in commercial deals.
Why This Matters for Buyers
Without removing the survey exception, buyers may be exposed to issues they didn’t know existed.
With a survey, those risks are identified and addressed before closing.
Bottom Line
A survey exception limits your protection — a survey helps remove that limitation.
At South Texas Surveying, we help Houston commercial buyers provide the documentation needed to strengthen their title coverage and close with confidence.