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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU with my neighbour about our boundary

156 replies

ThisPinkCrow · 17/03/2025 20:26

Hi all,

We have just bought a house in London and are new homeowners. My adjacent neighbour has also bought their house at the same time as me and has begun doing works to it.

My neighbour wants to install EWI and a French drain along their main wall that is only accessible via my side access. I am seeking advice about what people would do in my position because it's not clear to me. Strangely, I can't find any examples of my situation on the internet. I would have thought this is not an uncommon thing. I want someone to tell me YABU/YANBU or if I'm missing anything really obvious here.... thank you to anyone who reads this.

The neighbours house is extended at the rear on the first and ground floor while mine is not extended at all. Both of our houses have damp issues on the ground floor. The neighbours wall is solid up to point of their extension, the extension has a cavity wall above and below. Among other things such as a French drain, as part of a multi-pronged effort to tackle this damp, my neighbour wants to install exterior wall insulation of ~ 10 cm thickness on all the sides of their house. I want to state at the offset I want my neighbours to be able to put insulation on and improve their wall. At the same time, I don't want to agree without being fully informed and regret it later.

The side wall of the main living area of their house borders the full length of my side access. My side access is only accessible to me by my gate. My side access leads straight to my garage at the very back of my garden. Their main wall is stepped out ~ 10cm in places for the two chimney breasts, before it recesses back into the main wall. At the top their roof soffits go another ~10cm beyond the chimneys, and then the roof gutters another ~ 10cm, so overall the furthest part of their structure projects give or take ~30cm from the main rendered wall.

The titles of our properties indicate an approximate straight line boundary along the wall, which then joins the garden fences and the driveway hedge/brick.

The neighbour suggested initially that the boundary follows a straight parallel line from the chimney breasts, so the gap sandwiched between their chimney breasts is their land, which means they can insulate and they just need permission for access and nothing more.

My view was that logically the boundary between our plots would follow exactly the shape of the main fixed structure which is the foundational wall, so along the main recessed wall, then following chimney breast 1, back to the main wall, following chimney breast 2, back to the main wall until it meets the garden fence which aligns with the main recessed wall exactly.

I thought that this is the boundary because the corners of their main wall precisely align with the edges of fences / connecting boundary features that separate our properties at the front drive and at the back garden. This is also the case for other properties with chimneyed walls along the same road. There is also a side access garage extension on the same road which has been built right up to the other house's wall since forever, including fully wrapping around the chimney breasts of their neighbours wall. Not that I would dream of doing this or that it would be approved these days but it seems indicative of where a technical boundary is. There is also a more recent side extension on the same road that looks like it stops not far from the adjacent properties roof structure, but my assumption there is that this was stopping some distance short of the main boundary which is the wall.

The insulation they proposed to put on would not go further than their current chimney breast depth, so in effect their wall would become straight as the parts of the main wall would be brought outwards, with insulation, to the chimney breasts which would be re-rendered but uninsulated (insulated internally) - so that the minimum width of my current side access (2.3 metres), which is set by the protrusion of the chimney breasts, is unchanged. The total area here that would be used by the insulation along this small strip that goes along their wall is only about 1.2 metres squared (12 metres length of their wall x 0.1 metres width).

I said OK to most of this, if that strip is technically my land then they can have that. Additionally I said that they can put the drain adjacent to their newly insulated wall provided that we agree the drain isn't changing the boundary, which we would both then agree follows the shape of their now insulated main wall.

The one material amendment I suggested is a ~ 2m length gap of uninsulated render at the end of their rear extension on the ground floor (which is ahead of the end of my unextended house) - because their extension has a cavity wall and the damp issues are not significant there and something can be done internally. If I wanted to do a rear extension and extend this rear extension out to the side, I would prefer to have all the space I can get even if it's just 10cm. I felt like this was a reasonable compromise where we both got enough of what we wanted - they got 90% of the insulation and the drain, I did not have the most usable width removed from my side access if I wanted to bring vehicles through. Then we would do a normal boundary agreement between ourselves and register this with HMLR which is very cheap and easy to do.

After hearing this the neighbour has paid a lot of money for a surveyor to do a determined boundary report to clarify the boundary. I said I would accept the outcome if the report explained why my thinking was incorrect, then they would seek to register the determined boundary with HMLR.

The report caveats that this is the surveyors opinion because they do not have the original plans, but the surveyor says that it's most logical that the boundary at the wall goes up to the end of my neighbours roof gutters. So my thinking is wrong, and the neighbours thinking that their boundary extends from their chimney breasts in a straight line is also wrong.

My reading of this is that all the land projected downwards from the edge of the neighbours roof gutter is theirs. Basically it's saying they own ~ 25-30 cm of my side access on the ground and all the airspace above it. The report doesn't references other houses locally or on the street, other than to say they also have projecting roof gutters, nor does it explain how the current garden and drive would be visibly offset from the roof edge were this the true boundary, it more seems to assert the conclusion based on the surveyor's experience.

If this is the true boundary then the neighbour does not need my permission to do improvement works to their wall (the insulation and the drains come within this 30 cm strip) they only need permission for access, permission which I would obviously grant if I believed the surveyor is right.

My view was that the gutters and soffits at the top could be classed as a minor trespass at most, or in effect they may be allowed to overhang the boundary because it's not bothering anyone. I was never remotely concerned or bothered about this overhang until I read their surveyor's report. This was not mentioned when I was purchasing my house but I don't blame anyone for that. I don't care about the overhang as long as the downpipes, which come down adjacent to their chimney breasts along their wall, don't discharge on my side and they do not, it doesn't cause any harm to me and if they wanted to maintain that they'd always be given access immediately.

If I accept the edge of the gutters as the boundary, this means my side access can be narrowed another 20cm by the present neighbours or (more likely) future owners if they ever choose to do so and I have no say in the matter. If I also choose to put minimal 10 cm insulation on my wall on my side of the side access (which is currently uninsulated just like the neighbours is), then in the worst scenario the minimum width along my side access at the pinch point could be reduced to less than 2 metres, and I can't really accept that if I want the option to bring vehicles through in future.

I am not really sure what happens next at this point. I just read the report and I've messaged my neighbour to tell them I don't feel like the outcomes are well explained and that if they believe the outcome, that they own ~30cm of pathway in what I perceive to be my side access, and seek to register this boundary I would have to dispute it reluctantly. I've also asked them to forward my details to the surveyor to get in touch with me so they can be better explained to me in case I'm just not getting it.

I'm still on good terms with the neighbour from my perspective, like I'm trying to be difficult, and we're still communicating with each other without any problem, and I don't have any problem with them either. but obviously this is starting to seem like it's about to go off the rails.

So.... AIBU to my neighbour here? Am I just crazy and this is what the boundary really is? If the situation was reversed and I just bought their house and they had bought mine, I do not believe I would assume that I owned part of their side access because my house's roof soffits and gutters slightly overhanged onto their side.

However, if I wanted to insulate my side wall and add a drain to reduce damp, I think I would be completely normal to want those changes and to hope that the neighbour wants to try to work with me to allow them, and to arrive at some compromise which isn't perfect but works well enough, while maintaining an agreement about the existing boundary.... that's what I've tried to do. I've not said no to anything that impacts their ability to tackle their main damp problem that they've asked of me until this point.

But if they want me to accept a determined boundary is somewhere massively different than where I thought it was in order, and then register it, in order to then tackle their damp then I'm not sure how that doesn't lead to solicitors and lots of money going up in flames. I wouldn't be bothered at all if the side access was another 20 - 30cm wider at its narrowest either but it's not and vehicles seem to only get bigger with time, equally I would be worried about what accepting this proposed boundary would do to my house value.

Thank you to anyone who made it to the end of this long post.. I tried to shorten it but it's still lengthy.

OP posts:
Thread gallery
11
PurpleNebula84 · 17/03/2025 21:18

I'm just here for the diagram 🤷🏻‍♀️

nameychangey1112 · 17/03/2025 21:23

Oh my gosh. That level of agony for what 2 msquare? You said you will agree with their surveyor, surveyor says something you don't like so you will dispute now? You could pay for another surveyor. I know people in London can go crazy over 10 cms. But this is madness op. Think long term, save your sanity. Built your own extension 10 cm less. And boundaries don't have to follow walls by the way. I had a similar situation in London and our boundary didn't follow the natural shape but a straight line. If you have your own sur eyor the might say the same. Or suppose they say different. What happens? Will you sue each other over this?

ThisPinkCrow · 17/03/2025 21:28

Ok, sorry all. I hope the images below help. It doesn't discuss the details of the context that led to this (putting insulation on their wall and a drain adjacent the wall, both of which I have co-operated and proposed a solution for), this is in the main post, but it at least shows what we both think the boundaries are. At this point it is just this determined boundary report which I think is unreasonable, at the same time.. I am not a surveyor, so I do question my own opinion, but the surveyor doesn't really explain why it is like this and more asserts it based on their experience.

If the diagrams do not add clarity let me know and I will be clearer.

Basically, am I being unreasonable to think the boundary is what I think it is and finding the surveyor's suggestion of it to be inaccurate?

I have not read the other posts but will get around to it shortly.. thank you all.

AIBU with my neighbour about our boundary
AIBU with my neighbour about our boundary
AIBU with my neighbour about our boundary
OP posts:
Londonrach1 · 17/03/2025 21:29

Diagram needed for mumsnet. Re your boundary issues you need a supervisor with your interests and a party wall agreement. Do you have the land register as that should told you who owes what. Don't put details on here. Good luck. Sounds very complicated

DonutsWin · 17/03/2025 21:30

ThisPinkCrow · 17/03/2025 20:26

Hi all,

We have just bought a house in London and are new homeowners. My adjacent neighbour has also bought their house at the same time as me and has begun doing works to it.

My neighbour wants to install EWI and a French drain along their main wall that is only accessible via my side access. I am seeking advice about what people would do in my position because it's not clear to me. Strangely, I can't find any examples of my situation on the internet. I would have thought this is not an uncommon thing. I want someone to tell me YABU/YANBU or if I'm missing anything really obvious here.... thank you to anyone who reads this.

The neighbours house is extended at the rear on the first and ground floor while mine is not extended at all. Both of our houses have damp issues on the ground floor. The neighbours wall is solid up to point of their extension, the extension has a cavity wall above and below. Among other things such as a French drain, as part of a multi-pronged effort to tackle this damp, my neighbour wants to install exterior wall insulation of ~ 10 cm thickness on all the sides of their house. I want to state at the offset I want my neighbours to be able to put insulation on and improve their wall. At the same time, I don't want to agree without being fully informed and regret it later.

The side wall of the main living area of their house borders the full length of my side access. My side access is only accessible to me by my gate. My side access leads straight to my garage at the very back of my garden. Their main wall is stepped out ~ 10cm in places for the two chimney breasts, before it recesses back into the main wall. At the top their roof soffits go another ~10cm beyond the chimneys, and then the roof gutters another ~ 10cm, so overall the furthest part of their structure projects give or take ~30cm from the main rendered wall.

The titles of our properties indicate an approximate straight line boundary along the wall, which then joins the garden fences and the driveway hedge/brick.

The neighbour suggested initially that the boundary follows a straight parallel line from the chimney breasts, so the gap sandwiched between their chimney breasts is their land, which means they can insulate and they just need permission for access and nothing more.

My view was that logically the boundary between our plots would follow exactly the shape of the main fixed structure which is the foundational wall, so along the main recessed wall, then following chimney breast 1, back to the main wall, following chimney breast 2, back to the main wall until it meets the garden fence which aligns with the main recessed wall exactly.

I thought that this is the boundary because the corners of their main wall precisely align with the edges of fences / connecting boundary features that separate our properties at the front drive and at the back garden. This is also the case for other properties with chimneyed walls along the same road. There is also a side access garage extension on the same road which has been built right up to the other house's wall since forever, including fully wrapping around the chimney breasts of their neighbours wall. Not that I would dream of doing this or that it would be approved these days but it seems indicative of where a technical boundary is. There is also a more recent side extension on the same road that looks like it stops not far from the adjacent properties roof structure, but my assumption there is that this was stopping some distance short of the main boundary which is the wall.

The insulation they proposed to put on would not go further than their current chimney breast depth, so in effect their wall would become straight as the parts of the main wall would be brought outwards, with insulation, to the chimney breasts which would be re-rendered but uninsulated (insulated internally) - so that the minimum width of my current side access (2.3 metres), which is set by the protrusion of the chimney breasts, is unchanged. The total area here that would be used by the insulation along this small strip that goes along their wall is only about 1.2 metres squared (12 metres length of their wall x 0.1 metres width).

I said OK to most of this, if that strip is technically my land then they can have that. Additionally I said that they can put the drain adjacent to their newly insulated wall provided that we agree the drain isn't changing the boundary, which we would both then agree follows the shape of their now insulated main wall.

The one material amendment I suggested is a ~ 2m length gap of uninsulated render at the end of their rear extension on the ground floor (which is ahead of the end of my unextended house) - because their extension has a cavity wall and the damp issues are not significant there and something can be done internally. If I wanted to do a rear extension and extend this rear extension out to the side, I would prefer to have all the space I can get even if it's just 10cm. I felt like this was a reasonable compromise where we both got enough of what we wanted - they got 90% of the insulation and the drain, I did not have the most usable width removed from my side access if I wanted to bring vehicles through. Then we would do a normal boundary agreement between ourselves and register this with HMLR which is very cheap and easy to do.

After hearing this the neighbour has paid a lot of money for a surveyor to do a determined boundary report to clarify the boundary. I said I would accept the outcome if the report explained why my thinking was incorrect, then they would seek to register the determined boundary with HMLR.

The report caveats that this is the surveyors opinion because they do not have the original plans, but the surveyor says that it's most logical that the boundary at the wall goes up to the end of my neighbours roof gutters. So my thinking is wrong, and the neighbours thinking that their boundary extends from their chimney breasts in a straight line is also wrong.

My reading of this is that all the land projected downwards from the edge of the neighbours roof gutter is theirs. Basically it's saying they own ~ 25-30 cm of my side access on the ground and all the airspace above it. The report doesn't references other houses locally or on the street, other than to say they also have projecting roof gutters, nor does it explain how the current garden and drive would be visibly offset from the roof edge were this the true boundary, it more seems to assert the conclusion based on the surveyor's experience.

If this is the true boundary then the neighbour does not need my permission to do improvement works to their wall (the insulation and the drains come within this 30 cm strip) they only need permission for access, permission which I would obviously grant if I believed the surveyor is right.

My view was that the gutters and soffits at the top could be classed as a minor trespass at most, or in effect they may be allowed to overhang the boundary because it's not bothering anyone. I was never remotely concerned or bothered about this overhang until I read their surveyor's report. This was not mentioned when I was purchasing my house but I don't blame anyone for that. I don't care about the overhang as long as the downpipes, which come down adjacent to their chimney breasts along their wall, don't discharge on my side and they do not, it doesn't cause any harm to me and if they wanted to maintain that they'd always be given access immediately.

If I accept the edge of the gutters as the boundary, this means my side access can be narrowed another 20cm by the present neighbours or (more likely) future owners if they ever choose to do so and I have no say in the matter. If I also choose to put minimal 10 cm insulation on my wall on my side of the side access (which is currently uninsulated just like the neighbours is), then in the worst scenario the minimum width along my side access at the pinch point could be reduced to less than 2 metres, and I can't really accept that if I want the option to bring vehicles through in future.

I am not really sure what happens next at this point. I just read the report and I've messaged my neighbour to tell them I don't feel like the outcomes are well explained and that if they believe the outcome, that they own ~30cm of pathway in what I perceive to be my side access, and seek to register this boundary I would have to dispute it reluctantly. I've also asked them to forward my details to the surveyor to get in touch with me so they can be better explained to me in case I'm just not getting it.

I'm still on good terms with the neighbour from my perspective, like I'm trying to be difficult, and we're still communicating with each other without any problem, and I don't have any problem with them either. but obviously this is starting to seem like it's about to go off the rails.

So.... AIBU to my neighbour here? Am I just crazy and this is what the boundary really is? If the situation was reversed and I just bought their house and they had bought mine, I do not believe I would assume that I owned part of their side access because my house's roof soffits and gutters slightly overhanged onto their side.

However, if I wanted to insulate my side wall and add a drain to reduce damp, I think I would be completely normal to want those changes and to hope that the neighbour wants to try to work with me to allow them, and to arrive at some compromise which isn't perfect but works well enough, while maintaining an agreement about the existing boundary.... that's what I've tried to do. I've not said no to anything that impacts their ability to tackle their main damp problem that they've asked of me until this point.

But if they want me to accept a determined boundary is somewhere massively different than where I thought it was in order, and then register it, in order to then tackle their damp then I'm not sure how that doesn't lead to solicitors and lots of money going up in flames. I wouldn't be bothered at all if the side access was another 20 - 30cm wider at its narrowest either but it's not and vehicles seem to only get bigger with time, equally I would be worried about what accepting this proposed boundary would do to my house value.

Thank you to anyone who made it to the end of this long post.. I tried to shorten it but it's still lengthy.

If you have a mortgage on the property, you have to involve your lender. You cannot cede something that you don’t completely own.

TheSilentSister · 17/03/2025 21:31

Why should OP give up any of her land. The neighbours surveyor has already admitted he hasn't seen the plans plus he's being paid by the neighbour!
OP, you are right, the original property boundary is all that matters. They are not entitled to breach this.
OP, don't just agree to this. Even if you don't want to extend yourself, future sales could become complicated.

stayathomegardener · 17/03/2025 21:39

Excellent diagram.

ThisPinkCrow · 17/03/2025 21:43

nameychangey1112 · 17/03/2025 21:23

Oh my gosh. That level of agony for what 2 msquare? You said you will agree with their surveyor, surveyor says something you don't like so you will dispute now? You could pay for another surveyor. I know people in London can go crazy over 10 cms. But this is madness op. Think long term, save your sanity. Built your own extension 10 cm less. And boundaries don't have to follow walls by the way. I had a similar situation in London and our boundary didn't follow the natural shape but a straight line. If you have your own sur eyor the might say the same. Or suppose they say different. What happens? Will you sue each other over this?

I said I'd agree if they explain it to me, right. There is no explanation, it's just asserting an outcome based on experience - theyre not referencing other propreties on the street (which contradict their view), or locally, case law, or anything. Do you think you would just accept anything someone else says, I am aware the neighbour is paying for this survey to the tune of thousands of pounds - far more than the land value, land that I would give freely anyway to add their insulation because it is de minimis. The issue is the boundary suggested now goes well beyond that de minimis area and so this has become a sort of separate matter as well. My comment there was with reservations that this person knows more than either of us and can explain their assertions.

There is no agony on my end. I said I would give them the 10cm they wanted for insulation along the wall without question and allow a drain to be put in. I have excluded a 2 meter part (of a total 12 meter wall) at the back on the ground floor where they have a cavity wall, they never tried to argue with me about that or discuss it, I just said it wasn't my preference. Every inch does matter where I live sadly.

But if that was a solid wall at the end I wouldn't be saying no, I would let them have it despite my wishes, it's just not necessary to have the insulation there for the problem they want to solve. Honestly I'm not even sure they are being advised correctly by the damp contractors who just seem to want them to do every possible kind of remedial work to fix the damp all at once without really seeming to know what is causing it, but that's not really my concern, my concern is just making sure there is not an issue with the boundary or with my ability to use the side access in future, or for future owners.

You know what, if they really want that part at the end we can have a conversation about that too, we never did. I asked them if they were happy with this compromise and they said yes, I said I might be prepared to budge if this small part the back bothers them, they said no. Next thing I hear the family have discussed it and are doing a boundary survey when up to that point it seemed like we were going to agree between ourselves and register the boundary that follows the wall that we had verbally agreed on.

OP posts:
gotmyknickersinatwist · 17/03/2025 21:43

DonutsWin · 17/03/2025 21:30

If you have a mortgage on the property, you have to involve your lender. You cannot cede something that you don’t completely own.

Good lord. Was there any need to quote the entire OP?
@ThisPinkCrow the excellent diagrams make perfect sense.

gotmyknickersinatwist · 17/03/2025 21:47

@ThisPinkCrow but why would you just give them the 10cm?
Surely you could, or should sell it to them, with proper legal paperwork to change the boundary, so as to avoid future disputes if you sell.

MyrtleLion · 17/03/2025 21:50

The boundary is where you think it is because your garage is on the boundary line. If it was their boundary your garage would be a few cm to the left. Boundaries generally run straight so I would say the wall is the boundary.

There should have been a plan with the contract when you bought your place. Ask your conveyancing solicitor about it. It should be detailed in the contract where the boundary is.

If you move the boundary to their line, some of your garage will be on their land, which can't be right.

Mayflyoff · 17/03/2025 21:50

DonutsWin · 17/03/2025 21:30

If you have a mortgage on the property, you have to involve your lender. You cannot cede something that you don’t completely own.

Why would you quote something that long when it is the OP, so obviously what everyone is talking about?

Happyears · 17/03/2025 21:54

ThisPinkCrow · 17/03/2025 20:40

I don't take it personally, it is a long post. I tried to shorten it. I think it's fair to ask for a diagram instead of expecting most strangers to read that much, not that surprised by the responses! I did think of doing a diagram but also felt that text would be easier actually in my case, but evidently it is not. Making the diagram in Powerpoint / trying to now..

Edited

People on Mumsnet LOVE a diagram. For property stuff but also parking issues and pram jams - anything really.

AlmostAJillSandwich · 17/03/2025 21:57

Yeah i think you're right OP, that the guttering etc extending off your neighbours wall is technically crossing on to your land overhanging it. I wouldnt agree to moving the boundary, you're knocking land and value off your own property, and would make your side access to garage difficult to use.

TotHappy · 17/03/2025 21:58

I read it all OP, and it was very clearly put.
I think you should look at your plans showing boundaries too, but surely you've done that? Are they not clear? And yes I don't think you need to give away 30cm all along your access on the word of their surveyor. But not sure you'll be able to avoid spending money on solicitors or your own surveyor or both.

ThisPinkCrow · 17/03/2025 22:00

gotmyknickersinatwist · 17/03/2025 21:47

@ThisPinkCrow but why would you just give them the 10cm?
Surely you could, or should sell it to them, with proper legal paperwork to change the boundary, so as to avoid future disputes if you sell.

I do need to consult a solicitor for this before the works eventually start, whether it's a free transfer of the 10cm from my land changing the boundary to match their chimney depth, or whether the gap between the chimney breasts for the most part was already theirs is not important to me personally. Either way that would be formalised with the legal paperwork at the end to address the concerns you bring up, and there was going to be a normal boundary agreement registered with HMLR to this effect, up until the point they chose to pay for a surveyor. Now it seems like if I consent to the existing damp-related work, that I am now also consenting to a new and different boundary which is much wider than I expected.

Yes the land has value, but 10cm is de minimis as far as I am concerned except at the very end where they have a cavity wall, and I would not charge for it, even if I found some use for that tiny strip eventually and I'm sure I would.

Besides, I think my neighbour should be able to add some exterior insulation to their wall, and while that land has some small value to me, I don't want to nor do I feel comfortable charging for it, and that's not because I want to get along with them, though that is a bonus. I think it's a nice thing to do and it doesn't bother me, same way the roof gutter overhang on their side does not bother me.

At one point they offered just to buy the whole strip from me after asserting it belonged to them, I'm not sure if that is a concession about what they truly believe, but I said I was not interested in making this a transaction. I said I would rather give them what I thought was needed to solve their problem, and they could tell me if they were not happy with it. Bear in mind their main rooms along that wall are barely above 3 metres wide, I do not want to ask them to add interior wall insulation.

OP posts:
Gall10 · 17/03/2025 22:02

CountryQueen · 17/03/2025 20:32

Blimey. Nobody is going to read all of that

I certainly aren’t going to read it…it’s longer than Ulysses!

Shodan · 17/03/2025 22:04

OP have you tried https://www.gardenlaw.co.uk/phpBB2/index.php www.gardenlaw.co.uk/phpBB2/index.php]]]] It's not the speediest forum for replies, but they know their stuff.

Second, visit https://www.ricsfirms.com/media/1229/rics-consumer-guide-boundary-disputes-2018.pdf www.ricsfirms.com/media/1229/rics-consumer-guide-boundary-disputes-2018.pdf]]]] You can get a free, half-hour telephone call with a local surveyor for some basic advice.

ExIssues · 17/03/2025 22:05

Putting insulation on the outside of an old house will make the damp worse...it needs ventilation not insulation

ThisPinkCrow · 17/03/2025 22:05

Shodan · 17/03/2025 22:04

OP have you tried https://www.gardenlaw.co.uk/phpBB2/index.php www.gardenlaw.co.uk/phpBB2/index.php]]]] It's not the speediest forum for replies, but they know their stuff.

Second, visit https://www.ricsfirms.com/media/1229/rics-consumer-guide-boundary-disputes-2018.pdf www.ricsfirms.com/media/1229/rics-consumer-guide-boundary-disputes-2018.pdf]]]] You can get a free, half-hour telephone call with a local surveyor for some basic advice.

Thank you.

I am awaiting approval of my registration on GardenLaw.

As for the second, yes I will do that as well, thank you again.

OP posts:
stayathomegardener · 17/03/2025 22:07

A 10cm ransom strip could be worth 100's of thousands in the right circumstances.

I know you aren't looking to profit or made things difficult but honestly your neighbours are being CF's.

peanutbutterjelly6 · 17/03/2025 22:07

Nowvoyager99 · 17/03/2025 20:27

All that text and no fucking diagram!

Are you new?

😆 this made me chuckle!

Letstheriveranswer · 17/03/2025 22:09

I did read the whole post and looked at the diagrams. I am no expert but it doesn't seem right to me that a boundary should be defined by how far their gutter / soffit / eaves stick out! I would speak to your conveyancing solicitor

oviraptor21 · 17/03/2025 22:14

One would hope title plans would clarify.
My experience of boundary surveyors is that they use a best guess when the plans are not clear. And sometimes their best guess flies in the face of the evidence.

Seeline · 17/03/2025 22:15

How old are the properties?