ALTA Survey Cost for Shooting Range Properties
Quick Price Estimate
Typical Range: $4,050 - $10,800
Shooting Range properties typically cost 35% more than standard properties due to elevated risk factors.
Why Shooting Range Properties Cost More
Shooting Range properties require standard ALTA survey services with attention to property-specific features and improvements.
Environmental Risk: High — Phase 2 often recommended
Key Risk Factors: Lead contamination from ammunition
Pricing by Scenario
| Scenario | Typical Cost Range |
|---|---|
| Standard property | $4,050 - $10,800 |
| Complex property | $4,658 - $12,420 |
| Property with known issues | $5,265 - $14,040 |
What to Expect
ALTA Survey for Shooting Range
An ALTA/NSPS Land Title Survey for shooting range properties includes:
- Boundary determination with all corners marked
- Building footprint and improvement locations
- Parking areas and drive aisles
- Easements and rights-of-way
- Encroachments affecting the property
- Table A items as required by your lender
Special Considerations for Shooting Range:
- Underground infrastructure may require additional research
- Environmental remediation areas should be documented
- Access restrictions may affect survey scope
Timeline
| Service Level | Turnaround | Cost Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Standard | 2-3 weeks | Base price |
| Expedited | 7-10 days | +20-30% |
| Rush | 3-5 days | +40-50% |
Note: High-risk properties like shooting range may require additional time for thorough investigation. Rush timelines may not always be available.
ALTA Survey for Shooting Range by State
- ALTA Survey for Shooting Range in California
- ALTA Survey for Shooting Range in Texas
- ALTA Survey for Shooting Range in Arizona
- ALTA Survey for Shooting Range in Florida
- ALTA Survey for Shooting Range in North Carolina
- ALTA Survey for Shooting Range in Tennessee
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does an alta survey cost for a shooting range?
ALTA Survey for shooting range properties typically costs $4,050 to $10,800. This is 35% higher than standard properties due to the high risk level.
Why do shooting range properties cost more?
Shooting Range properties require standard ALTA survey services with attention to property-specific features and improvements.
Do I need a Phase 2 ESA for a shooting range?
Phase 2 ESA is often recommended for shooting range properties, especially if RECs are identified in the Phase 1 ESA.
What to Include in Your Phase 1 ESA Request
When soliciting quotes from environmental consultants, provide the following to ensure accurate scoping and pricing:
- Property address and APN — enables the consultant to pre-screen regulatory databases before quoting
- Property size (acreage and building square footage) — larger sites require more reconnaissance time
- Known or suspected environmental history — prior uses, USTs, spills, or remediation you’re aware of
- Lender name and loan program — some lenders have specific report requirements (e.g., SBA, HUD, CMBS) that affect scope and who can sign
- Required turnaround — standard is 2–3 weeks; rush orders (3–5 days) add 40–50% to cost
- Target closing date — drives urgency and whether a reliance letter or update letter will be needed later
Getting quotes from at least two consultants is standard practice. Cheapest is not always best: a low quote from an inexperienced firm that misses a REC can cost far more in Phase 2 ESA and remediation than you saved on the Phase 1.
Typical Phase 1 ESA Timeline
| Step | Duration |
|---|---|
| Quote and contract execution | 1–3 days |
| Regulatory database search | 2–5 days |
| Site reconnaissance visit | 1 day (scheduled within 3–7 days) |
| Historical records review | 3–7 days (concurrent with database search) |
| Report drafting and review | 3–5 days |
| Final report delivery | 14–21 days total (standard) |
| Rush delivery | 5–10 days total |
Under ASTM E1527-21, a Phase I ESA is presumed viable when conducted within 180 days prior to the acquisition or transaction date (not the site visit date). If more than 180 days pass between transaction and completion of key components, an update letter is required. CMBS and SBA programs each set their own independent validity windows (12 months and 1 year respectively).
Lender Requirements for Shooting Range Properties
Risk Classification
Shooting Range properties are classified as High environmental risk for Phase 1 ESA purposes — lead contamination from ammunition. This property type carries a 1.35× cost multiplier versus standard commercial properties (lead contamination), resulting in a typical adjusted range of $4,050–$10,800 nationally.
What Lenders Require
High-risk property types require Phase 1 ESA under most lender programs. SBA Standard Operating Procedures require Phase 1 ESA for all 7(a) and 504 loans where the collateral is or has been used for manufacturing, printing, funeral homes, trucking terminals, or junkyard operations — the transaction cannot close without a satisfactory report. CMBS mortgage loan purchase agreements require the Phase 1 ESA to have been conducted within 12 months prior to loan origination. HUD/FHA requires Phase 1 ESA for all multifamily transactions and commercial properties under PCNA guidelines, with high-risk uses triggering additional review. A Phase 1 finding RECs at high-risk properties commonly leads to Phase 2 ESA requirements and may require environmental remediation or insurance prior to closing.
Report Standards
All Phase 1 ESAs must follow ASTM E1527-21 — the current standard adopted in December 2022. Reports must be completed by a qualified Environmental Professional (EP) meeting the qualifications defined in the AAI rule. Lenders require the report to be addressed or include reliance language allowing them to rely on the findings. CMBS lenders typically require Phase I ESA within 12 months of loan origination. SBA accepts reports within one year of loan issuance. Under ASTM E1527-21, five time-sensitive components must be completed within 180 days of the acquisition/transaction date to invoke the innocent landowner defense.
Related Property Types
- ALTA Survey for Funeral Home / Mortuary
- ALTA Survey for Hospital
- ALTA Survey for Junkyard / Salvage Yard
- ALTA Survey for Manufacturing Facility
Related Pages
- National ALTA Survey Cost Overview
- Phase 1 ESA for Shooting Range
- ALTA Survey Companies Compared
- Who Pays for Due Diligence?
- What is ALTA Table A?
- ALTA vs Boundary Survey
2026 ALTA/NSPS Standards — What Changed
The 2026 ALTA/NSPS standards took effect on February 23, 2026, replacing the 2021 standards. Any ALTA survey contracted on or after that date in your area must follow the new requirements. Key changes that affect survey scope and cost:
New Encroachment Table (Table A Item 20)
Surveyors must now provide a structured summary table identifying encroachments across 5 categories — boundary crossings, easement intrusions, setback violations, undocumented access, and undocumented occupation. Expected to be required by virtually every lender.
Technology-Neutral Fieldwork
The 2026 standards replaced prescriptive "on the ground" language with "practices generally accepted by the surveying profession." This opens the door for drones, LiDAR, and AI tools — potentially reducing costs over time.
Surveyors Now Research Adjoining Deeds
Previously, title companies provided copies of adjoining property deeds. Under the 2026 standards, this responsibility shifts to the surveyor — adding research time, particularly for properties with complex boundary situations.
Utility Search Distances Clarified
The 2026 standards clarify that evidence of utilities must be located within 5 feet of the boundary, except for utility poles which use a 10-foot threshold. This removes the ambiguity that existed under the 2021 standards.
Aerial Imagery Formalized (Table A Item 15)
Drone and aerial imagery can now formally supplement ground surveying for interior features, with required written agreements on source, date, and accuracy limitations. Boundary-proximate features still require ground methods.
Monument & Evidence Standards Updated
Surveyors must now describe each monument's relationship to the ground surface (protruding, flush, or below grade). Evidence of possession and occupation must be shown regardless of distance from the boundary — not just within 5 feet.
Cost impact: The 2026 changes are expected to add 3–8% to typical ALTA survey costs in your area, driven primarily by additional research and documentation requirements. Technology-neutral fieldwork provisions may offset some costs as drone and LiDAR tools mature.