The integrated land development can attain the purpose of cadastration. With the development, cadasters in chaos can be readjusted to square land to multiply the economic value of the land and to improve the quality of living by broadening the roads, increasing grassy land, building new schools, and planning the public facilities. In recent years, due to the active development by the local funds and the financial and labor limitation of the government, the regions and areas of the urban land readjustment initiated by private estate owners have been increasing gradually. It takes long time to carry out the integrated land development. In the cases of the urban land readjustment and zone expropriation, many applied survey tasks are adopted in the process of the development, such as urban planning survey, topography survey, engineering survey and cadastral survey. The legal accuracies for the above survey tasks are different. Therefore, the quality of the final outcome in each survey task might affect the accuracy of the cadastral survey. Nowadays, with the high value of a piece of a land, people expect much of the accuracy of the land survey and the correctness of the cadastral map. In consequence, it is essential to lay down the appropriate strategies of regulating accurate survey outcome to ensure the accuracy of cadastration. Complying with the survey process of integrated land development and the regulation of applied survey in term of accuracy for all steps, this research proposes nine strategies to improve the accuracy and correctness for cadastral survey as follows: setting up consistent results of the control survey, accurately controlling the urban planning stakes survey, setting criterions of the cadastral overlay in boundary legal enforcement division, re-checking the legal enforcement division, checking the urban planning stakes and the boundaries of the developed roads, taking control of the engineering survey of public facilities, setting criterions of the traverse network adjustment in each process, accurately improving the traverse and supplementary control point survey, and accurately controlling the urban land readjustment initiated by private estate owners. The implementation of the nine strategies will satisfy the requirement of an accuracy of ±2 cm in the cadastral survey.