When a property is divided into smaller lots for sale, a subdivision map is required. The two types of subdivision maps used in most jurisdictions are tract maps and parcel maps. Which one applies depends on how many lots are being created. Understanding the difference is important because the map type determines the approval process, the engineering requirements, and the timeline. Getting it wrong means restarting the application from scratch.
The Basic Rule
Under the California Subdivision Map Act (Government Code Section 66411 et seq.), the threshold is:
- Parcel map: Subdivisions creating 4 or fewer lots (including the remainder parcel).
- Tract map: Subdivisions creating 5 or more lots.
Many other states use similar thresholds, though the exact number varies. Oregon, for example, distinguishes between partitions (3 or fewer lots) and subdivisions (4 or more lots). Washington uses a similar framework. The concept is the same: smaller subdivisions get a streamlined process; larger ones get full review.
Parcel Map Process
Tentative Parcel Map
The tentative parcel map (TPM) shows the proposed lot layout and is submitted for planning review. It includes:
- Existing and proposed lot lines with dimensions and areas.
- Existing and proposed easements (utility, access, drainage).
- Topographic contours and existing improvements.
- Proposed street or driveway access.
- Utility availability (water, sewer, storm drain, power, gas, telecom).
- Preliminary grading concept.
The TPM is typically reviewed by the planning commission or zoning administrator. For small parcel maps (2-3 lots), some jurisdictions allow administrative (staff-level) approval without a public hearing. Approval typically takes 2-4 months.
Final Parcel Map
After the TPM is approved (with conditions), a licensed surveyor prepares the final parcel map. This is a precise legal document showing exact lot dimensions, bearings, distances, curve data, and monuments. It is recorded with the county recorder and creates the new legal parcels. The final map must be filed within a specified time after TPM approval (typically 24-36 months, with extensions available).
Tract Map Process
Tentative Tract Map
The tentative tract map (TTM) is substantially more detailed than a TPM and includes everything a TPM includes plus:
- Proposed street layout with right-of-way widths, curb returns, and cul-de-sac dimensions.
- Preliminary utility plans showing water, sewer, storm drain, and dry utility infrastructure.
- Preliminary grading plans with pad elevations, slope ratios, and drainage patterns.
- Traffic study (if required by the city or county).
- Environmental analysis (typically a CEQA Initial Study at minimum).
- School impact fees, park dedication or in-lieu fees, and other impact fees.
TTM approval requires a public hearing before the planning commission and, in many jurisdictions, city council approval as well. The process typically takes 6-18 months including environmental review.
Final Tract Map
The final tract map is prepared by a licensed surveyor and is more detailed than a final parcel map. It includes monumentation, lot dimensions, street centerlines, easement dedications, and certificates from the engineer, surveyor, and approving officials. It is recorded with the county recorder.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Factor | Parcel Map | Tract Map |
|---|---|---|
| Number of lots created | 4 or fewer | 5 or more |
| CEQA review | Often exempt (Class 15) | Typically required (IS/MND or EIR) |
| Public hearing | Sometimes (varies by jurisdiction) | Required |
| Tentative map approval time | 2-4 months | 6-18 months |
| Public improvements required | Minimal (frontage only) | Full (streets, utilities, drainage) |
| Improvement bonds | Sometimes | Required |
| Park dedication / fees | Sometimes | Required (Quimby Act in California) |
| Typical engineering cost | $15,000 - $50,000 | $80,000 - $500,000+ |
| Map expiration (tentative) | 24-36 months | 24-36 months (extensions available) |
Civil Engineering Scope: Parcel Map
For a parcel map, the civil engineer's scope typically includes:
- Tentative parcel map preparation. The topographic survey, lot layout, and preliminary utility and grading concepts.
- Conditions of approval response. After the TPM is approved with conditions, the engineer must design and document the required improvements (typically limited to frontage improvements such as sidewalk, curb and gutter, utility connections, and driveway approaches).
- Improvement plans. Construction drawings for the required improvements. For a parcel map, these are typically 3-8 sheets.
- Final map review. Coordinate with the surveyor to ensure the final map is consistent with the approved improvement plans.
Civil Engineering Scope: Tract Map
For a tract map, the scope is much larger:
- Tentative tract map preparation. Full preliminary engineering including street layout, lot grading, utility design, and drainage study.
- Environmental support. Engineering data for the CEQA document: drainage calculations, traffic study data, utility capacity analysis, and grading volumes.
- Conditions of approval response. Tract map conditions are typically 5-15 pages of requirements from multiple agencies (planning, public works, fire, water, sewer, school district, parks).
- Improvement plans. Full construction documents including grading plans, utility plans (water, sewer, storm drain), street plans, signing and striping, erosion control, and stormwater management. For a subdivision, this is typically 20-60 sheets.
- Supporting reports. Drainage report, stormwater control plan, geotechnical coordination, utility will-serve letters, fire flow analysis, and sewer capacity analysis.
- Cost estimates and bond calculations. The jurisdiction requires cost estimates for all public improvements as the basis for improvement bonds.
Condominiums: The Exception
Condominium subdivisions (airspace subdivisions) create multiple units within a single building but do not divide the land into separate lots. In most jurisdictions, a condominium map follows the parcel map process regardless of the number of units. A 200-unit condominium building may only require a parcel map, not a tract map, because the land itself is not being subdivided. However, the conditions of approval for a large condominium project may be just as extensive as a tract map, and the engineering scope is comparable.
Phasing a Tract Map
Tract maps can be recorded in phases (also called units or phases of development). This allows the developer to record and sell lots in the first phase while the later phases are still under construction. Each phase must include all infrastructure needed to serve the lots within that phase. The civil engineer must design the infrastructure so that each phase functions independently: water mains must loop or connect, sewer lines must have outlets, and streets must have temporary turnarounds at phase boundaries.
Common Mistakes
- Misunderstanding the lot count. Serial parcel maps on the same property (splitting 2 lots, then splitting again to create more) may be treated as a single subdivision by the city. If the total number of lots created over time exceeds the parcel map threshold, the city may require a tract map retroactively.
- Underestimating the timeline. Developers who expect a tract map approval in 3 months are consistently disappointed. Budget 12-18 months from application to recorded map for a tract map.
- Ignoring conditions of approval from other agencies. The fire district, water district, school district, and public works department all impose conditions on tract maps. These conditions affect the civil engineering design (hydrant spacing, water main sizing, sewer connections, frontage improvements) and must be addressed before the final map can be recorded.
- Letting the tentative map expire. If the final map is not recorded before the tentative map expires, the entire entitlement lapses. Extensions are available in most jurisdictions but must be applied for before expiration.
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