Arizona Does Not Require a Survey Before a Fence
Arizona has no state law requiring a property survey before building a residential fence. The main fence-related statute in Arizona, ARS 3-1428, deals with livestock fencing in agricultural areas, covering things like the responsibility of livestock owners for damages when animals escape. It has nothing to do with residential property line fences or suburban boundary disputes.
So in a strict legal sense, you can install a fence in Arizona without ever ordering a survey. The question is whether that is a good idea, and for most homeowners, the answer is no.
Why the Absence of a Requirement Does Not Mean It Is Risk-Free
Property lines in Arizona are often less obvious than people assume. In suburban Phoenix and Tucson, lots are laid out on a grid and it can seem like the fence line is self-evident. But setback requirements, easements, and small discrepancies between where you think the line is and where it legally is can turn a straightforward fence project into a costly dispute.
Common sources of fence placement problems in Arizona:
- Assuming an existing fence or wall marks the true property line, when it may have been placed incorrectly years ago
- Using a county GIS parcel viewer as if it were a precise survey, when the data has inherent approximation built in
- Relying on a neighbor's verbal agreement about where the line is, which has no legal standing
- Not accounting for utility or drainage easements that run along property lines and restrict where structures can be placed
- Building in a monsoon-season wash or drainage corridor that is subject to encroachment restrictions
HOA Rules in Phoenix, Scottsdale, and Tucson
Even where state law is silent, local rules often fill the gap. Many of the largest master-planned communities in Maricopa County and Pima County have strict fence requirements written into their CC&Rs (covenants, conditions, and restrictions).
Common HOA fence requirements in Arizona include:
- Pre-approval from the architectural review committee (ARC) before any fence installation
- Requirements for specific fence styles, heights, and materials that match the community aesthetic
- Setback requirements measured from the property line
- A requirement to submit a site plan or copy of the recorded plat showing the proposed fence location
- In some cases, a requirement for a licensed survey or permit documentation before approval
Violating HOA rules can result in fines, a demand letter from the HOA attorney, and a requirement to remove and redo the fence at your expense. Check your CC&Rs and contact the HOA before ordering materials.
City and County Permit Requirements
Most Arizona cities and towns require a fence permit for fences over a certain height, typically six feet. Phoenix, Tucson, Mesa, Chandler, Scottsdale, and most other Arizona municipalities have fence permit processes that may require a site plan showing the fence location relative to property lines and structures.
The site plan requirement often means you need at minimum a copy of your recorded plat showing where the fence will go. For older properties where the plat is less precise, or for lots with irregular shapes, a boundary survey is the cleaner option because it gives you a certified document you can submit with the permit application.
Check with your city or town's development services or planning department before starting. Permit requirements vary by jurisdiction across Arizona.
Monsoon Season and Encroachment Disputes
Arizona's monsoon season (June through September) creates a specific category of fence dispute. Flash flooding can shift property landscape features, expose buried markers, and make it easier to see drainage patterns that cross property lines. After a significant monsoon event, it is not unusual for neighbors to realize that water is flowing across what they assumed was a clear boundary.
Wash corridors in the Phoenix metro, including neighborhoods in Queen Creek, Chandler, and Buckeye, often have drainage easements recorded along them. If you fence across a drainage easement, the city or county can require removal regardless of whether you own the underlying land. A survey combined with a title report showing recorded easements is the way to confirm you are not building in a restricted area.
Shared Fence Cost in Arizona
Unlike some states, Arizona does not have a general residential fence cost-sharing statute. There is no law that automatically requires your neighbor to split the cost of a fence along the shared property line. Shared fence costs in Arizona are a matter of private negotiation between neighbors.
If you and your neighbor agree to share costs, put it in writing. A simple signed agreement specifying each party's share, the fence type and location, and the process for future maintenance is worth doing even between friendly neighbors. It avoids disputes when the property is later sold to someone who was not part of the original conversation.
A boundary survey helps in this context because it gives both neighbors a shared reference for where the line is. Starting a shared fence project without confirming the line creates ambiguity that can surface years later.
What a Survey Tells You Before You Build
A boundary survey from a licensed Arizona Professional Land Surveyor confirms:
- The exact legal location of your property corners, marked with physical monuments
- The dimensions of your lot along each boundary line
- Whether any existing fences, walls, or structures encroach across the line from either side
- The location of any easements that may restrict fence placement
For a fence project, the surveyor can also stake the line with temporary markers (wooden stakes or paint) so you can see the boundary before any post holes are dug. This step often costs less than the full certified drawing and is worth asking about if all you need is the visual line for a straightforward fence installation.
The Cost of Getting It Wrong
A boundary survey for a standard Arizona suburban lot costs $450 to $900 for most properties. Removing and rebuilding a fence that was placed incorrectly by even a foot can cost $3,000 to $10,000 or more depending on fence type and length, plus legal fees if the dispute escalates. The math is clear: a survey before the project is almost always cheaper than remediation after.
Browse our directory to find a licensed Arizona land surveyor in your county and get quotes before your fence installation begins.