Boundary Tree Law: Who Owns a Tree on the Property Line?
When a tree grows right on the line between two yards, a simple question causes a surprising number of disputes: who actually owns it? The established rule across most of the United States is straightforward — ownership follows the trunk. If the trunk straddles the boundary, the tree is jointly owned by both neighbors, and neither can remove or seriously harm it without the other’s consent.
Here is how boundary-tree ownership works, what each neighbor can and cannot do, and how to handle a disagreement.
How Tree Ownership Is Determined
The Trunk Location Rule
Ownership is decided by where the trunk emerges from the ground, not by the canopy or roots. A trunk entirely on one side belongs to that owner; a trunk that crosses the line is shared.
Branches and Roots That Cross
If a single-owner tree’s branches or roots cross the line, the neighbor may generally trim them back to the boundary — see handling overhanging branches — but that does not give them ownership.
| Where the trunk is | Ownership |
|---|---|
| Entirely on your land | Yours |
| Straddling the line | Jointly owned |
| Entirely on neighbor’s land | Theirs |
Boundary Trees Are Jointly Owned
Shared Decisions
A jointly owned tree belongs to both neighbors as co-owners. Major decisions — removal, heavy pruning, treatment — require mutual agreement.
Neither Can Remove It Alone
One owner cannot cut down a boundary tree without the other’s consent; doing so can make them liable for the other’s share of the tree’s value.
Rights and Duties of Co-Owners
Maintenance and Cost
Co-owners generally share responsibility for upkeep, and the cost of removing a shared tree is commonly split.
Harming a Shared Tree
Damaging or killing a co-owned tree can trigger a claim — potentially with double or treble damages. See how tree-damage awards are calculated.
What If You Disagree About a Boundary Tree
Talk and Mediate First
Most boundary-tree conflicts are best resolved by agreement; mediation is cheaper than court.
Legal Options
If a neighbor removes or damages a shared tree without consent, you may have a claim — see cutting a neighbor’s tree without permission.
Trees Near But Not On the Line
Your Tree Overhanging Their Yard
If your trunk is on your side, the tree is yours even if branches reach over — though the neighbor may trim to the line.
Trimming Rights
Either owner may trim encroaching branches or roots to the boundary, using reasonable care not to kill the tree.
Frequently Asked Questions
Who owns a tree on the property line?
A tree whose trunk straddles the boundary is jointly owned by both neighbors, who share decisions and responsibility for it.
Can my neighbor cut down a tree on the property line?
Not without your consent. Removing a jointly owned tree unilaterally can make them liable for your share of its value.
How is tree ownership decided?
By where the trunk meets the ground — not by where the branches or roots spread.
This article is general information, not legal advice; boundary-tree laws vary by state.
