Adverse possession has long served as a mechanism by which a squatter may acquire title to land through prolonged occupation. The Land Registration Act 2002 (LRA 2002) substantially altered this doctrine for registered land. This essay examines whether the reforms effectively eliminated adverse possession or merely restricted its operation, drawing on legislative provisions, case law and academic commentary to evaluate its continuing relevance.
The Position Before the LRA 2002
Prior to the 2002 Act, the Limitation Act 1980 permitted a squatter to extinguish the registered proprietor’s title after twelve years of adverse possession. Once that period elapsed, the squatter could apply for registration as proprietor under the Land Registration Act 1925. This regime allowed title to pass quietly once factual possession and an intention to possess were demonstrated (Powell v McFarlane (1977) 38 P & CR 452). The certainty of extinguishment encouraged straightforward claims and, in some instances, facilitated the resolution of boundary disputes or the reuse of abandoned urban land.
Key Reforms Introduced by the LRA 2002
Schedule 6 of the LRA 2002 replaced automatic extinguishment with a notice-based procedure. After ten years of adverse possession, a squatter may apply to be registered; however, the registrar must notify the registered proprietor, who then has two years to object or commence possession proceedings. Only in limited circumstances—such as where the proprietor fails to respond, or where the squatter can establish proprietary estoppel or reasonable belief that the land belongs to them—will registration be granted (LRA 2002, Sch 6, para 5). These changes shift adverse possession from a rules-based limitation device to an administrative application requiring active proprietor engagement.
Continued Practical Relevance and Limitations
Empirical evidence indicates that adverse possession claims persist, albeit in narrower circumstances. Boundary disputes often succeed because neighbours may reasonably believe the disputed strip forms part of their registered title (Zarb v Parry [2011] EWCA Civ 1306). Moreover, the Act preserves the possibility of registration where the proprietor is absent or untraceable, thereby preventing land from becoming derelict. Nevertheless, the requirement of notice and the two-year objection window have reduced opportunistic claims against actively managed estates. Academic commentators argue that the reforms strike a fairer balance between protecting security of title and accommodating de facto use, yet they acknowledge that the doctrine has not been abolished (Dixon, 2020). The continued appearance of adverse possession disputes before the courts demonstrates that the LRA 2002 modified rather than eliminated the concept.
Conclusion
The LRA 2002 has curtailed the ease with which adverse possession can be asserted against registered land, introducing procedural safeguards absent from the previous regime. While opportunistic claims have declined, the doctrine retains utility in discrete situations such as boundary rectification and neglected property. Far from killing off adverse possession, the legislation has recalibrated it to serve contemporary priorities of title certainty and efficient land use.

