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All Rights Guides
Property

বাড়ির মালিক হিসেবে অধিকার

As a homeowner in England & Wales, you have both rights and responsibilities regarding your property. These include the right to enjoy your property, subject to planning law, building regulations, restrictive covenants, and the rights of neighbours. Key areas include planning permission for alterations, party wall matters, boundary disputes, and the right to challenge nuisance from neighbouring properties.

Last updated: 2026-03-01

Your Rights

Permitted Development Rights

You can carry out certain alterations and extensions without planning permission under permitted development rights. These include small rear extensions, loft conversions (within limits), outbuildings, fences, and internal alterations to non-listed buildings.

Town and Country Planning (General Permitted Development) (England) Order 2015

Right to Light

If your property has benefited from natural light through defined windows for 20 years or more, you may have acquired a right to light. A neighbour's development that substantially reduces your light may be actionable.

Prescription Act 1832; Rights of Light Act 1959

Party Wall Rights

If you plan to carry out work on or near a shared wall or boundary, the Party Wall etc. Act 1996 gives you the right to do the work but requires you to serve notice on adjoining owners. If a dispute arises, it is resolved by appointed surveyors.

Party Wall etc. Act 1996

Right to Quiet Enjoyment

You have the right to enjoy your property without unreasonable interference from neighbours. Noise, smells, vibrations, and other nuisances can be challenged through the law of nuisance or environmental health complaints.

Common law nuisance; Environmental Protection Act 1990

Boundary Rights

You own your property up to its boundaries. Boundary disputes can be resolved by reference to title deeds, Land Registry plans, and the general boundary rule. Adverse possession may apply where boundaries have been in a different position for 10+ years.

Land Registration Act 2002; common law

Protection from Compulsory Purchase

If a public authority seeks to compulsorily purchase your property, you have the right to object, attend a public inquiry, and receive compensation at market value plus disturbance and loss payments.

Compulsory Purchase Act 1965; Land Compensation Act 1961

Common Myths

Myth

You can do whatever you like with your own property.

Reality

Planning permission is required for many alterations. Building regulations must be complied with. Restrictive covenants in your title deeds may limit what you can do.

Myth

A fence on your boundary belongs to you.

Reality

Ownership of boundary features depends on the title deeds, not assumptions. The 'left-hand side' rule is a common myth with no legal basis.

Myth

Trees overhanging your garden are your responsibility.

Reality

You have the right to cut back branches and roots that encroach on your property (to the boundary line), but the cut material belongs to the tree owner. You cannot trespass onto their land to do so.

What To Do

1

Check Your Title Deeds

Obtain your title register and title plan from HM Land Registry (£3 each online). These show the boundaries, any restrictive covenants, and rights of way affecting your property.

2

Check Planning Requirements

Before any building work, check with your local planning authority whether you need planning permission. Use the Planning Portal's interactive guides to check permitted development rights.

3

Resolve Disputes Early

For neighbour disputes, try to resolve matters informally first. Use mediation services if needed. For legal disputes, seek advice from a property solicitor.

Key Legislation

  • Town and Country Planning Act 1990
  • Party Wall etc. Act 1996
  • Land Registration Act 2002
  • Environmental Protection Act 1990
  • Law of Property Act 1925

Useful Contacts

HM Land Registry

Official register of land and property ownership.

Website

Planning Portal

Planning guidance and applications.

Website

Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS)

Find a surveyor for party wall, boundary, or valuation matters.

Website