
Commons registration and village green rights are some of the most powerful (and often most surprising) constraints a buyer can encounter. They can restrict development, dictate long‑established public access, and even prevent routine changes to land use.
Yet many clients only hear about them for the first time during conveyancing. This short guide explains what commons and village greens are, how they’re recorded, and why they matter for property transactions of all kinds.
What Are Common Land and Village Greens?
Common land refers to land over which certain people – historically “commoners” – hold traditional rights, such as grazing or collecting wood. Village greens are areas traditionally used by local communities for recreation, sports, dog walking or community events. Both types of land are legally protected and cannot be developed or enclosed without specific statutory processes. Even where the land looks unremarkable on the ground, registration as common land or as a village green has a powerful legal effect that can override private ownership ambitions.
How Are They Registered?
Since the 1960s, local authorities have kept statutory registers of common land and town or village greens. These registers record the exact boundary of the land, ownership details (where known), and any rights that exist over it. Registration provides certainty: once land is registered, those public rights are exceptionally difficult to remove. Importantly, registration doesn’t always mean the land is large or well‑known – small pockets, verges, and strips of seemingly unused land can all be listed, and these are often the ones that catch buyers unaware.
Why Does This Matter in Conveyancing?
Registration can have major implications for current and future use. A buyer cannot simply fence off, build on, change or resurface registered land. Stopping up rights of access is extremely difficult. Where a property includes – or abuts – a piece of registered common or village green, that status can have a direct impact on garden extensions, driveways, parking, landscaping, access improvements and development value. Even where the registered land is not being purchased, if it lies adjacent to the boundary, it can limit what the buyer may do and may affect saleability later.
How Do These Appear in Searches?
Local Authority Searches can reveal whether the land being purchased is registered as common land or a village green. However, the search result may only show entries for the land itself, not neighbouring land. This means buyers may still be affected by rights over nearby land even if the register doesn’t flag a direct charge. Planning history can also hint at these issues, especially where previous applications have been refused or restricted due to community use, public access, or longstanding recreational rights. Conveyancers should pay particular attention to boundary plans and any areas used informally by local residents.
What Risks Should Buyers Be Aware Of?
Buyers may unintentionally assume they can improve access, add parking, extend into a side garden, or incorporate an adjoining strip into their title, only to later discover the land is protected. Owners who obstruct or interfere with common land or village green rights may face enforcement action, criminal penalties, or civil challenges. Even if a buyer has no immediate development plans, the presence of registered land nearby can influence valuation, lender comfort and future marketability. It’s also worth noting that local communities can apply to register new village greens, sometimes triggered when land is threatened by development.
Can Registration Be Removed or Changed?
In practice, deregistering land or removing village green status is extremely difficult. There are narrow statutory procedures, but they usually require offering replacement land or proving that the land was wrongly registered. For most homeowners and small developers, these routes are neither simple nor quick. This is why early identification is crucial: buyers need to know how the land is designated before they rely on being able to alter it.
Commons registration and village green rights are powerful legal protections that can significantly influence what a buyer can do with land now and in the future. They can appear in unexpected places and come with consequences that aren’t always obvious at first glance.
By checking the registers early, reviewing boundary detail carefully, and helping clients understand the limits these designations impose, conveyancers can prevent misunderstandings and ensure plans remain realistic from day one.






