The short answer is: Your husband is correct. In the world of home improvement and neighborhood relations, there is an official, widely accepted “correct” way to install a fence, and it dictates that the smooth, finished side must face your neighbor, while the “bad” side (with the exposed structural posts and horizontal rails) faces your yard.
While it might seem frustrating to pay for a beautiful new fence only to stare at its structural skeleton, your husband’s warnings about potential “problems” are grounded in very real legal, social, and practical realities.
Here is exactly why your husband wins this round, and how you can still get the look you want.
1. The Legal Reality: Local Building Codes
Before deciding on an orientation based on looks, you need to check your city, township, or Homeowners Association (HOA) regulations. In an overwhelming majority of municipalities, it is actually illegal to face the structural side of a fence outward.
Local building codes frequently mandate a “good side out” policy. If you install the fence with the pretty side facing you and a neighbor complains, your local zoning officer can fine you or legally force you to tear the fence down and reinstall it backward entirely at your own expense.
2. The Security Reality: Creating a Ladder
There is a highly practical security reason for the “good side out” rule. The horizontal rails (or stringers) that hold a fence panel together essentially act like a built-in ladder.
If you put the pretty, flat side facing your house, the step-like structural rails will face your neighbor’s yard or the street.This makes it incredibly easy for an intruder, a wandering neighborhood kid, or a large animal to scale the fence and climb straight over into your yard. Keeping the rails on your side ensures your yard stays secure.
3. The Social Reality: Neighbor Etiquette
Fences are a notorious flashpoint for neighborly disputes. Forcing a neighbor to look at the unfinished back of a fence—especially if it is replacing a shared boundary line—is considered a major breach of property etiquette. It can breed immediate resentment and damage your relationship with the people living right next door.
💡 How to Get the “Pretty Side” on Both Sides:
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