What is an easement and how does it affect
ownership?
Can an easement strip your property rights? Read this and act now.
Quick answer
An easement is a legal right that lets someone use part of your land for a specific purpose. It does not transfer ownership. It creates a permanent or temporary burden on the title. That burden affects how you use, sell, mortgage, and value the property.
What an easement actually is
An easement is an interest in land recorded on the title. It gives another party limited rights — for example, a neighbor’s right to cross a driveway, a utility company’s right to run pipes, or an access path to a landlocked lot. The land that’s used is the servient tenement. The land that benefits is the dominant tenement.
Keywords: easement, property easement, easement agreement, title encumbrance, easement types.
Common types and real scenarios
- Express easement: Written in a deed or agreement. Example: a driveway easement recorded when a lot is split.
- Easement by necessity: Court-created when a parcel has no lawful access. Example: a back lot that must cross a front lot to reach the street.
- Prescriptive easement: Created by long, open, continuous use without permission (varies by jurisdiction). Example: a public footpath used for 20 years.
- Utility easement: For power, water, sewer lines. Example: a power company’s right-of-way through your backyard.

How an easement affects ownership — practical effects
- Use restriction: You can’t block or interfere with the easement holder’s rights.
- Title encumbrance: Easements remain on title and appear in a title search. They can limit financing and resale options.
- Value impact: Minor utility easements usually lower value slightly. Exclusive access easements can reduce usable land and cut value more.
- Transfer/sale: Easements usually transfer with the land. New owners inherit the burden unless the easement is extinguished.
Actionable steps every owner must take
- Order a title search and current survey before buying. Confirm recorded easements.2. Read the easement instrument. Note scope, hours, maintenance, liability.3. Negotiate edits before closing. Limit hours, route, or require repair obligations.4. Consult a real estate lawyer to confirm enforceability and remedies.5. Consider insurance or indemnity agreements for liability exposure.6. If necessary, pursue modification or extinguishment through negotiation or court.
Examples that matter
- Driveway easement: If neighbor blocks access, document interference, send formal notice, then escalate to a lawyer.
- Utility easement: Expect access for repairs. Ask for landscape restoration clauses and compensation.
- Prescriptive path: If you want it removed, expect a legal fight; prevention is cheaper — fence, formal permission records.
Final point — keep control
Treat easements like title headaches you can solve. Don’t assume they’re invisible. Do the title check, read the instrument, and get legal advice.
For expert local help with easements, title searches, or negotiating terms, contact Tony Sousa — local realtor with deep market knowledge: tony@sousasells.ca | 416-477-2620 | https://www.sousasells.ca



















