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Home » Fences & Boundaries » Can I build a fence next to my neighbours?

Can I build a fence next to my neighbours?

Fences & Boundaries, Questions & Answers · 4 September 2020

Yes, you can build a fence on either side of your garden next to your neighbour’s fence. If the fence is in your boundary then you are allowed to build a 2-metre high brick or wooden fence/wall!

Build your own fence next to the neighbours
Build your own fence next to the neighbours

A lot of homeowners do this because they are fed up of having to ask neighbours permission to paint or attach things thing to their fence.

There are many other reasons why people resort to building their own fences next to their neighbours:

  1. Nosey or over-talkative neighbours (5ft fence)
  2. Denied access to screw or paint neighbours fence
  3. Bad kept fence or brick wall (derelict)
  4. 5 feet fence and no privacy
  5. General privacy when in the garden!

What type of fence?

A wooden sturdy fence will suffice, it costs much less when compared to a brick wall. A panel and concrete kickers will last 20/30 years, but you might have to replace the wooden panels every 10 years.

  • Make sure you can slide fence panel out for staining
  • Concrete posts and concrete kickers
  • Wooden fence panels

It’s a very easy process and a fence company will have your fence up within the day or two. You do not have to ask your neighbours because you a well within your rights to build a fence next to your neighbour’s fence.

ENGLAND & WALES BOUNDARY LAW HANDBOOK
ENGLAND & WALES BOUNDARY LAW HANDBOOK

Tips to build a fence next to another fence

If you are building aa fence next to our neighbour’s fence for whatever reason, then here are some tips to help it go as smoothly as possible.

  • Leave enough room for posts and footings
  • Stagger your fence posts so you are not digging up your neighbours
  • Concrete posts are much stronger and will last a lot longer
  • Kickers or plinths work great for flower beds and raised gardens
  • Concrete plinths will not rot like a wooden fence

If you are doing the fence or you hire a fence company to put up the fence, be sure not to damage the neighbours because guaranteed they will be watching like a hawk! Apart from putting up a fence next to theirs, make sure there is nothing they can say when it comes to their fence stability ETC!

Goodluck

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Filed Under: Fences & Boundaries, Questions & Answers

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Jackie Henley says

    27 November 2020 at 3:32 am

    I have a fence erected inside the boundary line and have left the original post/chicken wire boundary marker. Can I now erect trellis up to 2.5 m? Is it the same ruling as the eaves of a shed if it’s within 2m of the boundary?
    Many thanks

    Reply
    • Wezaggle says

      28 November 2020 at 12:17 pm

      Hey Jackie,

      No, you can only go 2-metres, you cannot add the trellis on top because trellis is classed as fencing. So with the trellis, the overall height can only be 2 metres. Hope this helps!

      Reply
  2. Claire E says

    27 February 2021 at 5:06 pm

    Hi I’m hoping to get some advice, our neighbours on the left have have an old brick wall (partly comes onto our side) and an old piece of fence then joining on to another crumbling wall. Last summer we decided to leave all of there’s and put our own fence up completely on our land, fast forward to this year, the neighbour has decided she’ll take her rotten piece of wood out and stand a shed near by. Behind our new fence we left about a foot’ish gap all the way down for space for the posts to go in straight. Now I have her grandkids squeezing down bashing along the side of it throwing over anything we left behind it. Am I within reason to lift one of the pallets out and put something behind them to stop them squeezing through on to our left over space or am I been petty. I did explain to her when we put it up there would be a slight amount left due to her wall been angled, and that this wasn’t us donating the left over space to her incase we sold the house and new owners wanted it back, plus at the time she already had a divide in place but now she’s obviously taken part of it out. Thank you

    Reply
    • Wezaggle says

      28 February 2021 at 10:34 am

      Hi Claire,

      It sounds like you have given away a strip of your garden, the kids should not go beyond their boundary. You could put something up to stop them from running down the strip of land. Just go right up to your neighbour’s boundary line.

      The line is as thin as a piece of string so going tight up to your boundary would have been best.

      Hope this helps

      Reply
  3. Adam says

    13 March 2021 at 12:39 pm

    Hi,

    What is the maximum height I can have my boundary fence in the front garden?
    I keep reading about a 1m restriction if the fence is next to a highway/public pathway, however I assume this refers to the front fence facing the road.
    Does this also apply to the fence between my front garden and my neighbours? I am unsure.

    Thanks

    Reply
    • Wezaggle says

      13 March 2021 at 2:26 pm

      Hey Adam,

      The height for the front garden is 1 metre all around, even between neighbours properties. Although you can grow shrubs and bushes with no limit.

      Hope this helps

      Reply
  4. Berkshire Bird says

    25 March 2021 at 1:08 pm

    I own the boundary between myself & my neighbours which I had a 6’ fencing on. 10 years or so back my neighbour decided they did not like my fence & asked for mine to be removed, I declined & told them to erect a fence inside their own property. They erected 6’ fence panels on their side, their garden is higher than mine, every panel & post was higher than mine with their house number painted on every panel & post, over the years most of their fencing has broken & rotted causing damage to some of my ornamental trees.

    I have recently replaced 30’ of my fencing placing it at the same height as my neighbours around 7’ as I expected there has been disapproval from the other side, my new fencing is well inside my property & level with my neighbours (to cover the numbers).

    After that long story, as my new fence is the permitted height on my neighbours side & not above theirs could I be asked to put in planning &/or asked to reduce my fence height?

    Reply
    • Wezaggle says

      25 March 2021 at 2:09 pm

      No, your fence is under 2 metres, planning will not take action unless you are obviously over the stated height. If you have fence panels fitted with no trellis you will be fine, there is nothing that can be done now.

      Hope this helps

      Reply
  5. Han E says

    4 April 2021 at 10:02 pm

    Can increase the size of my back garden by using some of the ‘front’ garden (which is actually at the side of the house)? The house is on a corner so the front and side are next to a pavement and road. It would mean putting in higher fencing at the side to incorporate it into the back garden?
    If not possible, what If I put the higher fencing a metre inside the boundary, thus retaining a little bit of ‘front’ garden at the side?

    Reply
    • Wezaggle says

      5 April 2021 at 9:24 am

      Hey Han,

      I would double-check with the local council because they vary, but you would have to separate your back garden to the front garden with a gate, then a smaller fence around the front of your property.

      You should also check the local area and see what other properties have done with their boundary walls.

      Hope this helps and good luck.

      Reply
  6. N. Sullivan says

    10 April 2021 at 8:38 pm

    Hello, my neighbour (directly behind us) has built a large single storey extension with bi-folding doors spanning the front. This is uncomfortably close to the boundary. We are situated on lower ground and we are now significantly overlooked. We are the view. The new building provides our neighbours with eye-level view directly into the second floor bedrooms and bathroom of our house, which is hugely distressing particularly for my eldest daughter who has taken to keeping her curtains closed. The extension also gives a clear view into our downstairs rooms and garden.

    The plan for the building was originally rejected by the Council. We’d objected, as had others, on privacy grounds. Subsequently the plan was resubmitted (without change) and passed – despite further objections being made. The Council in passing the plans stipulated that a 2 metre fence must be installed in order to give privacy, and this was to be erected in the neighbour’s garden before bringing the extension into use.

    We already had a fence, erected at ground level at the boundary partition in our garden. So, we now have an additional fence erected behind it and on higher ground. As my neighbour’s garden slopes to the boundary, on their side, this new fence does not provide privacy as intended by the Council. The fence is not tall enough for that purpose. It provides some privacy for them. For example, if they are seated in their extension we cannot see up and over the fence from our downstairs rooms but when they are standing (inside the extension or on the slither of grass outside of it) they can see into our dining room, into our kitchen and garden – and they can look across directly into our bedrooms, as mentioned.

    The Council’s fence requirement, which was apparently intended to preserve our privacy, was never more than a tickbox execercise, as far as I can see.

    At the same time, as well as the view of this huge extension which dominates the view from every window at the back of our house, we now also have the additional spectacle of the double fencing to look at. The fence installed sits at more than 3 metres high from ground level in our garden (due to the fact we are on lower ground).

    My question really is this: was the Council acting fairly and in accordance with the law when planning officers requested fencing be installed by my neighbour that would stand at over three metres high from ground level in my garden?

    I query the suitability, efficacy and legality of this fence as a prerequisite to approving the extension plans.

    The Council will likely not retrospectively change their decision re the extension but I am seeking accountability and potentially financial redress. I’d welcome any perspective on this (with thanks from an exhausted NHS manager, who has worked tirelessly at home throughout the pandemic whist watching daily as this irreversible and invasive building project has unfolded).

    Reply
    • Wezaggle says

      11 April 2021 at 10:17 am

      Hey N.Sullivan,

      This setup seems extremely bizarre, how did the planning application get approved? It only takes one neighbour to dispute the planning application and it would be declined. Especially due to the picture-perfect view they have of your property.

      That is the whole point of planning permission, to avoid privacy issues and those building regulations are adhered to. The three-metre fence solution is non heard of. Which council does your property come under?

      The 3-metre fence idea seems like a band-aid idea to keep you happy. Sounds like you have been brushed under the carpet in preference to your neighbour. A three-metre fence in a domestic property should never have been the solution.

      I hope this helps and thank you for all your hard work 😉

      Reply
      • N. Sullivan says

        11 April 2021 at 11:08 pm

        Hi, thanks for the reply. Helpful to know you also think that this situation seems totally wrong. I am progressing and have written a letter to the Council today, which will be copied to the local MP etc. I’m also going to go to the Ombudsman if the Council don’t acknowledge responsibility. The Council is Kirklees. Too late in relation to the building (its up) but let’s hope I can get accountability and some redress. We objected twice by the way, rejected first time and passed the second but with the fence requirement added as a condition. With thanks again for your response 😊 🙏

        Reply

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