The more I dug into fence etiquette, the clearer it became: “finished side to the neighbor” is mostly a tradition dressed up as law. In many places, there is nothing in the building code that tells you which way your fence must face on a shared boundary. What actually matters is where you live, who owns the fence, and what your local ordinances or HOA rules say about it. Some communities do require the nicer side to face public streets or sidewalks, but that’s very different from a universal neighbor rule.
What truly holds neighborhoods together isn’t the direction of a few fence boards; it’s communication. When a fence sits on the property line, ownership, costs, and decisions are shared, and a simple written agreement can prevent years of resentment. When it sits on your land, you may legally choose the orientation—but courtesy still counts. Check the rules, confirm your boundaries, talk to your neighbor, and build a fence that protects your privacy without sacrificing peace next door.
