Right-of-Way & Fence Line Clearing in Montgomery County

Overgrown fence lines, easements, and access roads cleared back to a clean, maintainable strip.

Right-of-Way & Fence Line Clearing

Fence lines, property lines, easements, and access roads all want to disappear under brush in Montgomery County, and once they do they are a real problem — you cannot fix a fence you cannot reach, brush growing through the wire tears it apart, and an overgrown easement or right-of-way blocks access and creates a fire and storm hazard. We clear those strips back to a clean, maintainable line. That means cutting and mulching the brush, briars, and saplings along fence lines so you can repair and run fence, opening up overgrown property lines so you can see and survey your boundary, clearing utility and pipeline easements and access roads, and keeping right-of-way corridors open. Linear clearing is its own skill — it is about getting a clean, consistent strip the full length of the line without tearing up what is on either side. We have the equipment to work tight along a fence or down a narrow easement and leave you a line you can actually keep up.

Fence lines you can actually work

A fence line buried in yaupon and briars is a fence line you cannot maintain — and the brush growing through the wire is actively destroying it. We clear a clean strip along the line so you can pull old fence, set new posts, and run wire without fighting the brush, then keep a maintainable buffer on each side so it does not close back in by next season. Whether you are fencing for the first time or reclaiming an old line, we open it up so the fencing work is straightforward.

Easements, access roads, and right-of-way

Utility and pipeline easements, shared access roads, and right-of-way corridors have to stay open — for access, for safety, and often by requirement. Brush, saplings, and overhanging growth close them in fast out here. We clear and mulch these corridors to a clean, consistent width, keep access roads passable, and cut back the encroaching growth so the line stays open and usable. It is linear work that needs a clean edge and a steady width, which is exactly what we are set up to do.

What’s included

  • Fence lines cleared so you can repair and run fence
  • Property lines opened up for visibility and survey
  • Utility, pipeline, and access easements cleared
  • Right-of-way corridors kept open and passable
  • Clean, consistent width the full length of the line
  • Maintainable buffer left so it does not close back in

Get Help With Right-of-Way

Tell us about the property — acreage, what’s growing, and your goal — and we’ll call you back with a quote.

Prefer to talk now? Call (936) 555-0164.

Right-of-Way — Questions We Hear a Lot

Can you clear a fence line without damaging my existing fence?
Yes. We work tight and controlled along an existing fence, cutting and mulching the brush and briars off the wire and posts without tearing up the fence itself. If the fence is already being destroyed by brush grown through it, we will tell you honestly what is salvageable and what needs replacing once the line is open.
How wide a strip do you clear along a fence or easement?
It depends on what the line is for. For a fence you can work, a strip wide enough to set posts and run wire with a buffer on each side is usually right. For utility and pipeline easements there is often a required width. Tell us the purpose and any width requirement and we will clear to a clean, consistent strip that matches it.
Do you clear overgrown property lines so I can survey?
Yes. Reopening a brushed-in property line so a surveyor can find pins and run the boundary is a common job. We clear a clean line along the boundary so you can see across it, locate corners, and get the survey done — just have the line marked or the corners flagged if you know where they are.

Need Right-of-Way in Montgomery County?

Call now for a fast quote — we come to your property, walk the land with you, and quote it straight by the acre or the job.