Texas Porch

Land / Boundaries & access

Fences, lines & getting in.

Where your land ends, who fences what, and how you get to it are some of the most fought-over questions in rural Texas - and some of the most misunderstood. Here's the lay of the land (the doctrines exist; the answers are fact-specific).

Fences, range & boundaries

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Adverse possession ('squatter's rights')

Adverse possession ('squatter's rights') is a real Texas doctrine: under specific conditions, long-term use of land can ripen into ownership. Texas has several different time periods - 3, 5, 10, and 25 years - each with strict requirements (the possession must be open, exclusive, and continuous, and some versions require a registered deed and paying the taxes). It's far more demanding than 'find a vacant lot and move in,' and it's a frequent source of boundary and fence lawsuits. If you think a neighbor is encroaching, or someone is using your land, don't wait and don't rely on a website - talk to a real estate attorney promptly.

Access & easements

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Where to get real answers

AgriLife's 'Owning Your Piece of Texas' is the plain-English reference for fences, trespass, adverse possession, and easements; the State Law Library covers neighbor law. Boundary and access questions are fact-specific - a surveyor and a real estate attorney give the real answer.

Data vintage:
As reviewed June 2026
Last reviewed:
June 15, 2026

Caution: Not legal advice. Open-range status, boundaries, adverse possession, and easements all turn on local facts and your specific deed - use a licensed surveyor and a Texas real estate attorney, and act promptly on any dispute.

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