28/05/2026
Property boundaries in France: what buyers need to know before they commit.
Most people buying property in France spend considerable time thinking about the building itself, the condition of the roof, the state of the electrics, whether the kitchen needs replacing. The land boundary question tends to get less attention, partly because it feels administrative and partly because the cadastre map is so easy to pull up on a phone that buyers assume the picture they are looking at is the legal reality.
It is not, and understanding the difference matters more than most buyers realise.
The cadastre is a starting point, not a legal document
The cadastre, France's national land registry dating from the Napoleonic era, provides graphical plans showing plot boundaries across the whole country. It is publicly accessible at cadastre.gouv.fr and is genuinely useful for getting an initial sense of a plot's shape and extent. The parcelle cadastrale also forms part of the titre de propriété when land is purchased.
What it does not do is establish definitive legal borders. Cadastral boundaries can be imprecise, particularly for older rural properties where plots have been divided informally over generations. Treating the cadastre map as the legal boundary of what you are buying is one of the more common errors buyers make, and it can lead to disputes that are both costly and time-consuming to resolve.
The bornage process and why it is irreversible
Where boundaries are unclear or disputed, or where a plot is being formally divided, French law requires a qualified land surveyor, a géomètre-expert, to carry out a process called bornage. The surveyor assesses the boundary, places physical markers, and produces a formal report.
The detail that buyers need to understand before purchase is this: once both neighbouring landowners sign the bornage report, the boundary it establishes becomes permanently and legally binding. Neither party can subsequently challenge it, not even through the courts. A boundary agreed in bornage is a boundary agreed forever.
This is worth knowing before exchange, not after. If there is any ambiguity about the extent of a plot you are considering purchasing, establishing the boundary position before signing the compromis de vente is considerably simpler than attempting to resolve it once you are the owner.
Shared walls and joint ownership
In French law, a boundary wall between two properties is presumed to be jointly owned unless the title deed states otherwise. Both neighbours share responsibility for the costs of maintaining, repairing, or rebuilding it, with the exception that if one owner causes damage, they bear the cost alone.
For buyers of properties with shared boundary walls or structures, checking the title deed for any specific provisions is worth doing at the due diligence stage rather than discovering the position after a dispute has arisen.
Rights of way
French law grants a legal right of passage across a neighbouring plot to any property that has no direct access to a public road. The route must be the shortest practicable option, and the neighbour is entitled to reasonable compensation. For the right of way to be legally enforceable in the future, a notaire must formally register it.
For buyers considering rural properties with access via tracks across private land, the question of whether that access is formally registered is not a minor point. An unregistered right of way that has simply been used informally for years offers considerably less legal protection than one properly recorded in the title documentation.
What to do if a dispute arises
A direct conversation with a neighbour is almost always the right first step, and resolves more situations than buyers expect. Before undertaking any building work that touches a boundary, consulting the mairie is advisable. Where a dispute cannot be resolved informally, engaging a géomètre-expert to carry out a formal bornage is the appropriate route.
Contact us
French Plans has been helping international buyers navigate the French planning and property system for over twenty years. If you are in the process of identifying or purchasing a property in France and want professional guidance on boundaries, planning, or what a project could realistically deliver, we are happy to talk.
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