What’s the best way to address a boundary fence encroachment with a neighbor?
#1
My neighbor's new fence is definitely over the property line by a good six inches, according to my own survey. I’m not sure how to approach this without causing a huge dispute, but I also don't want to silently give up that strip of land.
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#2
I had a similar thing a couple of years back. My survey showed the fence was over the line by about six inches. I tried not to sound accusing, just said let’s review it together. I suggested we bring in a neutral third party to verify, and we walked the edge with the stakes and a tape. We ended up agreeing to hire a licensed surveyor to mark the true line and keep the discussion calm. It kept the heat down and left room for a factual fix.
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#3
I kept a little notebook for dates and measurements, snapped photos, and asked my neighbor for coffee to talk once. The first talk was tense but short. We agreed to verify with a proper survey before making any moves on the fence.
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#4
Part of me wonders if the real friction isn’t the six inches but how we both feel about property and pride. Sometimes the problem hides in the tone of the conversation more than the chalk line on the ground.
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#5
In my circle, the practical move is a neutral survey and a recorded agreement. The trap is convincing yourself you know the truth without a professional measurement. Still, I’m not sure it always resolves things, and I’ve seen it stall instead.
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#6
I did hire a surveyor after a fragile first chat. The survey confirmed the boundary, but the fence was already attached and would need to be moved. The outcome wasn’t dramatic, but the process took a while and I learned people don’t like changes to their yard.
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#7
One afternoon I wandered around the yard, checked the old pins, shuffled the fence line a bit with a chalk line to visualize what a shift would mean for flower beds and a gate. It felt silly but it gave me a clearer sense of what everyone would lose if we pushed too hard. Then I cooled off and focused on scheduling a real survey.
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#8
Do you think a simple talk can fix this, or is it worth bringing in a professional right away?
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