
Easements are one of those topics where one video opens up a hundred more questions. After Tiffany Webber’s easement video went live, the comments flooded in with questions she couldn’t possibly answer one at a time. So she compiled the top 25 and answered them all in one shot.
If you own property — or you’re thinking about buying — there’s a good chance at least one of these questions applies to you. Easements come up in closings constantly, and understanding how they work can save you real money and real headaches.
All 25 questions are covered below, or watch the full video for Tiffany’s rapid-fire breakdown.
Look at the recorded easement document. Whoever installed the sidewalks — often the HOA or the municipality — is typically responsible for maintaining them. The specific terms of the easement will spell out maintenance responsibilities.
Only the properties that need it to access their land — the property owners, their guests, and their invitees. It’s not open to everyone. That said, the easement document may limit use to specific properties even if others could technically benefit from it.
Yes, depending on the circumstances. If a neighbor or developer wants to run an easement across your property, you don’t have to agree for free. How you value the easement depends on how much of your property is being used and for what purpose. You can have an appraiser help you determine what it’s worth.
You’ll need to check the terms of the recorded easement. Most landscape easements spell out what kinds of landscaping can be maintained, by whom, and what areas can or can’t be blocked. The answer is probably yes, but the document controls.
It depends on how it was created. A written easement can be terminated by a written release from the benefiting party. Other ways include merger (you buy the other property and the easement is extinguished), litigation if the scope was exceeded, eminent domain, or foreclosure. The property owner who’s burdened by the easement generally can’t unilaterally get rid of it.
If the language says it’s binding on heirs, successors, and assigns with no termination conditions, then yes — it runs with the land indefinitely and transfers to every future owner. Some easements do include time limits or conditions that trigger termination. There’s also an easement in gross, which is specific to a person and ends when they no longer own the property.
Check the recorded easement. In most HOA situations, the HOA holds the easement and maintains the mailbox and surrounding area. If you as the property owner cause a condition that needs maintenance, that’s on you. But the general upkeep of the mailbox area typically falls on whoever holds the easement.
Because property taxes go to the fee simple owner of the land — and that’s you. Having an easement on your property doesn’t shift the tax burden to the easement holder. However, you can negotiate compensation for the easement that accounts for this, including a proportionate share of taxes.
This came in as a comment, not a question, but it’s worth highlighting. If there’s a drainage easement across your property for the water company, that doesn’t mean the neighborhood kids get to play there. An easement is for the specific party it’s intended for — a property owner, a utility company, a specific person — not a free-for-all.
In most cases, the property owner. It doesn’t really matter who planted the tree — what matters is whose land it’s on. If the easement holder planted the tree and created some obligation to maintain it, that could shift responsibility. But when it’s unknown, the property owner typically bears the responsibility.
Possibly. In North Carolina, if a utility easement hasn’t been used for a certain period of time (around 20 years), you may be able to apply for it to be abandoned through the appropriate utility commission. The process exists, but it requires a formal application.
It can be, especially if the parties don’t agree on where it should go or whether it should move at all. Moving an easement cannot be done unilaterally — everyone involved has to agree. If there’s a dispute, you’re looking at negotiations or potentially litigation.
Depending on the easement terms, there may be options — potentially including speed bumps or changes to the driveway surface. But Tiffany strongly recommends not taking any action without consulting a real estate attorney first. Modifying an easement area without legal guidance can create bigger problems.
A plat is a drawing of a subdivision that shows multiple properties, their boundaries, setbacks, utility easements, and rights of way. It’s different from a survey, which is a drawing of one individual property. Plats are recorded at the register of deeds and are a common way easements are documented in planned communities.
They can overlap, but they’re not always the same thing. A right of way typically describes an area where you can drive or travel to access a property. A driveway easement and a right-of-way easement are often used interchangeably. But not all easements are rights of way (like a utility easement), and not all rights of way are technically easements.
Probably not. A sidewalk is a strong indicator that an easement exists for pedestrian access, though not a guarantee. Without a sidewalk, there’s no default common law right to walk on someone else’s property just because it’s near the road. You’d need to check a survey to see exactly where the street ends and the private property begins.
Not by the property owner who’s burdened by the easement. The burdened party can’t unilaterally revoke or change an easement. Only the benefiting party can voluntarily release it. The original grantor — if they no longer own the property — has no authority to change the terms either.
It depends on the type. If it’s a driveway easement, the person using it doesn’t need to call you every time they drive to their house. But other easements may require advance notice — for example, if someone has an easement to cross farmland, the parties might agree on a notice period so livestock aren’t disturbed. Unless the easement specifically requires notification, no notice is needed.
This is highly fact-specific. It depends on what caused the injury and who had control over the condition that led to it. It could be the property owner, the easement holder, or both. This falls into personal injury and negligence law, and there’s no blanket answer without knowing the specific circumstances.
Through a title search at the register of deeds in the county where your property is located. Not every easement appears on your deed — many are recorded as separate instruments. A professional title search is the most reliable way to find everything that’s out there.
An easement by grant needs to be recorded at the register of deeds. Easements obtained other ways — by necessity, implication, or prescription — would be formalized through a quiet title action in court and then recorded. Not every easement has to be mentioned on your deed. Utility easements, for example, almost never appear on the deed itself but are still fully binding as long as they’re in the public record.
A utility easement typically can’t be used for general vehicular access — it’s for the utility company. A verbal agreement for access might give you permission now, but it offers very little protection. It wouldn’t transfer to future owners, and the person granting permission can change their mind at any time. Getting a written, recorded easement is the only way to secure long-term access.
Not in North Carolina. To establish a prescriptive easement here, you need adverse, hostile, open, notorious, exclusive, and continuous use for at least 20 years. Fifteen years isn’t enough. If you believe you have a prescriptive easement after meeting the 20-year threshold, you’d need to file a quiet title action to formalize it. Nothing is automatic.
(Covered in question 3 above — yes, you can negotiate compensation based on the scope of use and impact on your property.)
An easement is a non-possessory right for someone else to use your land for a specific purpose. A setback is a required distance from your property line where you’re not allowed to build. Easements involve another party’s rights. Setbacks are building restrictions from zoning ordinances. They’re completely different concepts, though both restrict what you can do with your property.
Watch the full video for Tiffany’s rapid-fire answers to all 25 questions — and pay special attention to the prescriptive easement discussion if you have neighbors using your land without permission.
At Thomas & Webber, easements come up in our closings and title searches constantly. Whether you’re trying to understand an easement on a property you’re buying, need to negotiate a new one, or want to know if someone is gaining rights to your land, we can help.
Our offices in Mooresville, Huntersville, and Denver serve property owners throughout the Lake Norman area, including Davidson, Cornelius, Sherrills Ford, Troutman, and Statesville.
Email us at [email protected] or call us: (704) 663-1600