Few things generate as much heat as a dispute between neighbours over the boundary of their respective properties. Whether it is a fence erected in the wrong place, a wall being rebuilt further into your garden, or a neighbour claiming your path belongs to them, these disputes can be emotionally draining, expensive, and damaging to relationships.
How are boundaries determined?
The legal boundary between two properties is determined primarily by the title deeds — the historical documents that transferred ownership. These include the original conveyance or transfer deed and any attached plans. The Land Registry title plan, shown on your official copy register, shows the general boundary only and is not a precise measurement. The scale used means it cannot be relied upon to determine boundaries to within a metre or two.
What evidence is relevant?
Relevant evidence includes the original conveyance plans, ordnance survey maps from the time of purchase, aerial photographs, historical photographs, physical features such as hedges, ditches, and fences that have existed for many years, witness evidence from long-standing neighbours, and expert surveyor reports. The age of physical features and whether they have been recognised as the boundary by previous owners can be decisive.
The presumptions
Various legal presumptions apply in the absence of clear evidence. A hedge and ditch boundary traditionally belongs to the land on the hedge side, on the basis that a landowner digs a ditch at the edge of their land and throws the spoil behind them to create a bank on which a hedge is planted. A wall on a boundary may be party wall, or may belong to one side depending on the deeds and who built it.
Adverse possession
If a neighbour has been using a strip of your land openly and without your permission for 10 years (registered land), they may be able to claim ownership of it through adverse possession. The law allows paper owners to object within a limited period. If you become aware of a neighbour using your land, act quickly — delay can affect your rights.
Resolving the dispute
Most boundary disputes are resolved through negotiation or mediation rather than litigation. A jointly instructed boundary surveyor can provide an independent opinion that both parties are more likely to accept. Court proceedings — typically in the County Court or Upper Tribunal — are slow and expensive, and costs can easily exceed the value of the land in dispute. Mediation is strongly encouraged by courts and often produces a workable solution that preserves the neighbourly relationship.
Boundary disputes escalate quickly and become disproportionately expensive. Early legal advice can often resolve matters before positions become entrenched.