I was told there was one unbreakable rule about backyard fences: the finished side always faces the neighbor. Contractors said it casually, neighbors repeated it like gospel, and friends insisted it was universal. So when I didn’t follow it, the reaction was immediate—side glances, awkward silences, pointed questions. What started as a simple project suddenly felt like a social misstep. Digging into codes and ordinances revealed the first truth: this “rule” is tradition, not law.
Some municipalities regulate height, materials, or curb appearance, but few mandate fence orientation. HOAs may enforce it, but outside those, it survives mostly because it looks nicer and signals consideration. Ownership matters more than appearance. Fences entirely on your property are usually yours to design. On property lines, fences often become shared structures, requiring mutual agreement. Many neighbor disputes start not from breaking law, but from unilateral decisions affecting privacy, views, or fairness.
Fences are emotional objects—they mark boundaries, safety, and control. Changing them alters how people feel in their space. Practical design choices, like rail orientation or durability, can clash with tradition but aren’t malicious. The real solution is communication. Ten minutes of conversation before building—showing plans, explaining reasons, asking for input—can prevent years of tension. Written agreements on placement, ownership, and maintenance are smart when structures are shared.
Being “right” isn’t always wise. You can follow codes perfectly and still harm relationships, or bend tradition thoughtfully and preserve goodwill. Fences are meant to create peace, not hostility. Ultimately, the truth is simple: laws and customs vary, property lines matter, and communication matters most. The side that faces your neighbor is far less important than treating them with respect. A well-built fence can last decades; a broken relationship can linger much longer.