Step 1 — Know the Good Neighbor Fence Act.

CA Civil Code § 841 (the "Good Neighbor Fence Act") presumes that adjoining landowners share equal responsibility — and equal cost — for a boundary fence. Either neighbor can initiate a replacement, but the process matters.

This law is the legal backbone of the cost-sharing argument. If you skip the proper notice, you lose the presumption and you're on the hook for the full cost.

Step 2 — Send 30-day written notice.

The law requires written notice to the adjoining owner at least 30 days before construction begins. The notice must include:

Email counts if you can prove delivery (read receipt or a follow-up confirmation). Certified mail with return receipt is bulletproof and runs ~$8.

Step 3 — Document the existing condition.

Photo the existing fence from multiple angles before sending notice. Include shots that show:

If the neighbor later disputes that the fence needed replacement, your dated photos win the argument.

Step 4 — Spec the replacement reasonably.

The presumption of shared cost only holds if the replacement is "reasonable for the use of the adjoining properties." If you want a $40,000 wrought-iron fence and your neighbor's yard is a vegetable garden, the courts may not enforce cost-sharing.

Match the new fence to the neighborhood standard:

Step 5 — If they agree: document it in writing.

A simple one-page agreement prevents 90% of future arguments. Include:

Both keep a copy. This isn't a contract that needs a lawyer — it's a memorandum of understanding that prevents "I never agreed to that" later.

Step 6 — If they refuse: file in small claims.

If the neighbor refuses to share costs after proper notice, you can:

  1. Replace the fence at your own cost
  2. Document all expenses (contractor invoice, permits, materials)
  3. File in small claims court to recover their share (up to $12,500 in CA)

The 30-day notice is your evidence. Most cases settle before the hearing — once the neighbor sees the actual filing, they typically agree to pay rather than appear in court.

Permit thresholds.

The single biggest mistake: Just hiring a contractor and starting work without notifying the neighbor. Even if you win in court later, you'll lose every conversation with them for the next decade. The 30-day notice is cheap insurance against a permanent feud.

What success looks like.

Notice sent. Neighbor agrees to 50/50 split (most do once they see the photos). One-page agreement signed. Fence installed in 2–3 days. Both parties happy. Property values protected on both sides of the line.

Done badly: contractor starts ripping out the fence on a Tuesday morning. Neighbor calls the police. Small claims case opens. Cost ends up doubled by the time it resolves.

Skip the DIY?

FXR handles full tear-out, neighbor coordination paperwork, and replacement — wood, vinyl, cedar, redwood. Post-and-footing rebuilds included.

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