Five Most Common Properties Surveyors See

Property disputes are incredibly common, and most of them come from simple misunderstandings about boundaries or land use. Surveyors see the same problems over and over. If you know what they are, you can avoid them early.

1. Fence Built on the Wrong Boundary

This is probably the most common dispute. People often assume: the existing fence is the true boundary, or the previous owner placed it correctly, But fences are frequently installed several feet off the actual line, moved over time,or built for convenience rather than accuracy. A survey often reveals the fence is partially on the neighbor’s property. That leads to arguments about whether it must be moved, removed, or compensated for.

2. Building Encroachments

This happens when a structure crosses the boundary line. Examples: house extension, garage, retaining wall, driveway and septic system. Sometimes the encroachment is only a few inches, but legally it can still be a major problem. If discovered later, the owner may be forced to: modify the structure, negotiate an easement, or compensate the neighbor

3. Missing or Moved Boundary Markers

Boundary markers (iron rods, concrete monuments, or pegs) define the legal corners of a property. Over time they may be: buried, removed during construction, destroyed by landscaping, or intentionally moved. Once the markers disappear, neighbors start guessing where the line is. That’s when conflicts start.

4. Right-of-Way and Access Disputes

Many properties have legal rights-of-way or easements. Examples: shared driveway access, utility lines, drainage channels, and road access across neighboring land. Disputes happen when: a neighbor blocks access, someone builds across an easement, boundaries and easements are confused. A survey plan shows exact easement locations, clarifying who can use what.

5. Tree and Landscaping Conflicts

Trees cause surprising legal battles. Common arguments include: branches hanging into the neighbor’s yard; roots damaging fences or walls, or trees growing directly on the boundary line. Ownership of the tree often depends on where the trunk sits relative to the boundary. Without a survey, people argue based on assumptions.

The Real Lesson

Almost every property dispute comes from one root problem: People rely on memory, fences, or guesswork instead of measured boundaries. A proper survey removes that uncertainty.

💡 Practical advice for property owners and developers. Before doing any of these, it’s smart to confirm your boundaries when building a house, installing a fence or wall, planting large trees, constructing driveways or drains, or buying land. The cost of a survey is usually tiny compared to legal fees and neighbor conflicts.

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