Wayleaves and easements: What’s the difference?

sarah ryan
Sarah RyanAccount Manager @ Lawhive & Non-Practising Solicitor

Wayleaves and easements both grant rights to use land, but they work differently. A wayleave is a temporary agreement, often used by utility companies, while an easement is a permanent legal right, like a shared driveway. Understanding these differences helps landowners and businesses manage access rights, avoid disputes, and know when compensation applies. Let’s break it down.

What are easements?

An easement is a legal right that allows a person, business, or utility provider to use someone else’s land for a specific purpose, even though they don’t own it. Easements typically apply to access, drainage, or utilities and are usually permanent, meaning they remain in place even if the property is sold.

Easements help prevent disputes between landowners by ensuring essential rights - such as access to a property or the ability to run utility services - are legally protected. They also provide certainty for both property owners and third parties who rely on the land for specific functions.

Key features of an easement

  • Legally binding: Once an easement is established, it is enforceable by law and often lasts indefinitely unless removed through legal means.

  • Attached to the land: Easements are not personal agreements; they benefit a specific property (dominant land) and apply to the burdened property (servient land). This means the right continues even when ownership changes.

  • Difficult to remove: A landowner cannot simply revoke an easement once it is legally in place. It usually requires a legal agreement or court order to remove it.

💡Example

Imagine you own a house, but the only way to reach it is by using a private road that crosses your neighbour’s land. If a right of way easement is legally in place, you have the guaranteed right to cross their land, even if the property changes ownership. Your neighbour cannot block or restrict your access without breaking the law.

What are wayleaves?

A wayleave is a temporary agreement that allows a company (such as a utility provider) to install and maintain infrastructure - such as electricity cables, water pipes, or broadband lines - on private land. Unlike an easement, a wayleave is not attached to the land, meaning it can be renegotiated or revoked if circumstances change.

Wayleave agreements are commonly used by utility companies that need access to private land to deliver essential services, but they are always based on permission from the landowner rather than being a permanent right.

Key features of a wayleave:

  • Temporary or renewable: Wayleaves are typically granted for a fixed period (e.g. one, five, or ten years) and can be renewed or terminated.

  • Compensation-based: In most cases, landowners receive payments from the company that benefits from the wayleave. This compensates them for allowing infrastructure on their land.

  • Not attached to the land: Unlike an easement, a wayleave is an agreement between the current landowner and the utility company. If the property is sold, the wayleave does not automatically transfer unless the new owner agrees.

💡Example

Imagine an internet provider wants to install high-speed broadband in your area, but they need to run cables across your land to reach a neighbouring property. They offer you a wayleave agreement, which gives them the right to install and maintain the cables in exchange for compensation. If you sell the property, the new owner would need to negotiate a new wayleave agreement with the provider.

What is the difference between an easement and a wayleave?

While both easements and wayleaves grant the right to use private land for specific purposes, they differ in duration, legal status, and compensation. An easement is a permanent legal right allowing access, drainage, or utility use on private land, even if ownership changes. A wayleave is a temporary agreement, often with utility companies, for infrastructure like cables or pipes.

Easement vs. Wayleave: A quick comparison

Feature

Easement

Wayleave

Duration

Permanent

Temporary or renewable

Legal status

A right attached to the land

A contractual agreement

Revocability

Cannot be revoked easily

Can be terminated with notice

Compensation

Not usually compensated

Landowners receive payments

Common uses

Rights of way, drainage, utility access

Utility poles, telecom cables, gas pipelines

Re-Cap: Easements vs. Wayleaves

  1. Easements: Permanent rights that stay with the property even when ownership changes. Used for rights of way, drainage, and utilities.

  2. Wayleaves: Temporary agreements that can be revoked and typically provide compensation to the landowner. Used mainly by utility companies for placing infrastructure on private land.

Why does this matter?

If you're a landowner, it’s important to understand your rights and obligations when dealing with easements or wayleaves. If a utility company wants access to your land, you may be entitled to compensation. If you’re purchasing a property with an existing easement, you cannot remove it easily, as it remains legally binding.

If you want to challenge or negotiate an existing wayleave or easement, seeking legal advice from an easements solicitor can help you understand your options.

FAQ

Can a wayleave become an easement?

Yes, if a wayleave has been in place for over 20 years and meets legal requirements, it may be converted into a prescriptive easement.

Do I need a wayleave for my property?

If a utility company needs access to install or maintain infrastructure on your land, they may request a wayleave agreement.

Can a landowner refuse a wayleave?

Yes, but utility companies can apply for statutory powers to install infrastructure if refusal causes disruption to essential services.

Final thoughts

Wayleaves and easements both allow the use of land for specific purposes, but they differ in permanence and legal status. Easements are long-term rights attached to the land, whereas wayleaves are contractual agreements that can be revoked. Understanding these differences can help landowners and businesses navigate land access rights effectively.

Looking for legal help? Get in touch today for a fixed fee quote and to see how our experienced property solicitors can help.

Daniel McAfee
Fact-checked by Daniel McAfeeHead of Legal Operations @ Lawhive & Practising Solicitor
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