Plat vs. Survey: What’s the Difference?
Posted by Hank Miller on
When buying a home, buyers often hear the terms plat and survey used as if they mean the same thing. They do not. The majority of real estate agents are similarly ignorant about the differences, unable to explain each and how they can be used by a home buyer. Understanding the difference can help home buyers avoid surprises and better protect themselves before closing.
Plat vs. Survey: What’s the Difference?
A plat is a recorded map that shows how a lot or subdivision is laid out on paper. It may show lot lines, dimensions, easements, setbacks, streets, and common areas. A survey is a property-specific drawing prepared by a licensed surveyor based on actual field measurements. It shows the property as it exists on the ground, including boundary…
10 Views, 0 Comments

Institutional investors are not the enemy of traditional homebuyers. They do not compete for inventory; traditional homebuyers cannot buy what real estate investors buy. 89.6% of single-family rentals are held by “mom-and-pop” landlords who own between 1 and 5 rental properties. The media continues to do an outstanding job of misrepresenting what a “real estate investor” is, conflating “institutional investors” with the “mom and pop” investor. It makes for fantastic click bait given the public’s 10 second attention span. The MSM should examine the “rules” traditional homebuyers are subject to as well as what those in the lower price tier are up against. It will then be obvious; there is no competition. In fact, institutional investors were net SELLERS…
Who is responsible for a tree that grows on or near a property line? What rights do you have if a neighbor’s tree, vines, or other plants grow into your yard? Fence line disputes can get confusing in Georgia, especially when vines start creeping over or trees begin to encroach into your yard. Here’s the simple version; if something grows onto your side, you can trim branches, vines, or roots that cross onto your property. You can usually do this without asking first, but you must stop at the property line. First step – know where your property line is! The fence might not be it.
Moving out of a house can get surprisingly emotional—especially when a seller takes what they shouldn't as they leave. Maybe it’s the large wall mirror, the cool smart thermostat, a custom light fixture, or even that little Japanese Maple they’ve babied for years. So what stays and what goes (can go)? That devil is in the details, and in Georgia, those details are in the Seller's Disclosure. It boils down to the definition of a "fixture" and how the seller completes the seller's property disclosure. Among other things, that document states what stays and what goes. Failure to understand this critically important document is the reason that this is the most common problem surrounding a home sale.
Our predictions for the 2026 Greater Atlanta real estate market are a bit different than the other talking heads. We developed our expectations in the field, not from behind a desk. We’re out in the dirt every single day, this is all we do. Our opinions are granular; based on LOCAL data, interaction with other local professionals, and a dash of trusted regional/national data. We consider ResiClub the most credible of those, a fantastic aggregator and their presentation is thorough and completely unbiased.
Home builders are concerned only about their bottom line. Homebuyers are a means to an end, it is all business. Those of us that remember the ’08-’09 crash, see many similarities in the current environment. Builder arrogance remains, but they now again must seek to court favor with buyers and agents. Don’t fall for the nonsense, the bottom line is their only concern. Anything done with builders must be done very carefully and with a complete understanding that they will make the rules.
"Torture the data, and it will admit to anything". Something the MSM and all of the click bait publications know well. Every day, it's continuous hand wringing and self created angst about real estate. Designed only to generate clicks, gone are the deep, well researched missives. Now the reports are tic toc level, AI generated, pablum. And just about all of it is wrong or misleading. ALL real estate is local, VERY local.
Home sellers can be a prickly group. This is especially true when markets are shifting, like now as sellers lose the edge and the market balances (mid-summer ’25). The trendy label is "accidental landlord", but an accidental landlord is nothing more than a stubborn seller. They don't listen, they know best. Their home is the “exception”; they have the one that all the buyers will flock to. Data? Meh, that’s for the others, not them. They know what the house is worth, just ask them. They are "experts".
was one of the quietest months in memory. Fortunately, the market quickly woke up (as the economy settled) and the Atlanta market got back to business in May.