Tennessee adverse possession requires 20 years (7 with color of title) of continuous, open, hostile, exclusive, and notorious possession.
Published May 6, 2026
## Adverse possession in Tennessee
**Adverse possession** lets someone gain legal title to land they don't own — by occupying it openly for a long enough period without permission. The doctrine seems strange ("steal land?") but exists for ancient policy reasons: rewarding productive use, settling stale boundary disputes, and clearing title.
### Tennessee requirements
- **Required period:** 20 years (7 with color of title)
- **Color of title** (formal but defective deed): 7 years
## The five universal elements ("OCEAN")
Every state requires possession to be:
**O — Open and notorious.** Visible enough that a reasonable owner would know about it. Hidden use doesn't count.
**C — Continuous.** Uninterrupted for the statutory period. Sporadic use, or a year-long absence in the middle, breaks the chain.
**E — Exclusive.** The possessor uses the land alone, not sharing with the true owner or the public.
**A — Actual.** Physical use of the land — building structures, fencing, farming, residing. Just "claiming" doesn't count.
**N — Notorious / Hostile.** Without the owner's permission. "Hostile" doesn't mean angry — just that the use is inconsistent with the owner's rights.
Many states add a sixth requirement: **paying property taxes** during the period.
## Color of title — shorter periods
Many states reduce the required period if the possessor has "color of title" — a deed that LOOKS valid but has a defect (forged, signed by wrong owner, badly recorded). Color of title:
- Shortens the required period (often dramatically)
- Lets the possessor claim ALL the land described in the defective deed (not just what they actually used)
- Often requires that property taxes be paid during the shortened period
## Tacking
Different possessors can combine their possession periods ("tacking") if there's privity (sale, gift, or inheritance) between them. Without privity, a new possessor starts the clock over.
## How adverse possession typically arises
- **Boundary disputes** — fence built in the wrong place; long-time use across a property line
- **Squatter cases** — someone occupies abandoned property
- **Chain-of-title problems** — defective deeds that have gone unchallenged
- **Family / inheritance disputes** — long-time family use without proper transfer
- **Easement-by-prescription** — adjacent doctrine for non-possessory rights (driveway, path)
## Common defenses for the true owner
- **Permission** — possession with the owner's permission isn't "hostile"
- **Tolled possession** — owner's incapacity, military service, minority pause the clock
- **Government property** — generally not subject to adverse possession ("nullum tempus")
- **Insufficient continuity** — gaps in use
- **Not exclusive** — owner used it too, or the public used it
- **Not open / notorious** — possession was hidden
- **Failure to pay taxes** — where state requires it
- **Lack of color of title** — where claimed period requires it
## Quiet-title actions
An adverse possessor doesn't automatically own the property — they must usually file a **quiet-title lawsuit** to formally establish ownership. The court reviews the evidence, and if all elements are met, issues a judgment that confirms title and can be recorded.
## Boundary fence rule
Some states have a separate **boundary by acquiescence** doctrine — when neighbors treat a particular line (often a fence) as the boundary for a long period (typically 7-20 years), the line becomes legally binding even if it doesn't match the recorded deed.
## Easements by prescription
Similar to adverse possession but for non-possessory rights — using someone's land for access (driveway, footpath, utility line) for the statutory period gives you an easement (a right to keep using) without ownership.
## What property owners should do to prevent adverse possession
- **Inspect property regularly** — at least annually for vacant land
- **Post "no trespassing" signs**
- **Grant permission in writing** — converts "hostile" into permissive (which doesn't ripen into adverse possession)
- **File trespass actions** if needed
- **Keep current on taxes**
- **Have property surveyed** to know exact boundaries
- **Maintain fences**
## What you should do
If you think you may have an adverse-possession claim — or you're an owner who believes someone is encroaching on your property — talk to a Tennessee real-estate attorney. These cases are evidence-intensive and require a quiet-title lawsuit to make the claim official. Most Tennessee real-estate attorneys offer paid initial consultations.
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*This guide is general information about Tennessee law as of early 2026 and is not legal advice. Adverse-possession requirements vary by state and have many edge cases (tolling, government land, color of title, boundary by acquiescence). Talk to a licensed Tennessee attorney about your specific situation.*
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change and outcomes depend on your specific situation — talk to a licensed attorney before acting on anything you read here.