Posted on December 3, 2025
Easements & The Valuation Impacts You Can’t Afford to Miss
Commentary from Mario Caro, MAI, AI-GRS, SR/WA
Right of Way Practice Leader, Lowery Property Advisors
“Have you ever taken the time to read your vesting deed or title commitment? You might be surprised by the language that shapes your property rights—or the rights an easement holder has across your land. As an appraiser evaluating easement acquisitions, it’s essential to understand the exact rights being conveyed or encumbered. Cover yourself: always ask for the easement document. And if you don’t understand it, talk to someone who does.”
Mario’s insights highlight just how critical these documents are. With that in mind, let’s look closer at how easements directly shape valuation.
How Easements Really Affect Value
Easements are one of the most overlooked drivers of market value in Texas real estate. Whether access is restricted, construction is limited, or another party holds superior rights, even a single sentence in an easement document can shift a valuation significantly.
The recent Keenan v. Robin case discussed here serves as a reminder that what looks like a “simple dirt road” through a ranch may actually be a dedicated public right-of-way—and therefore free from obstruction. In contrast, cases involving private easements show that locked gates or limited access may be permissible depending on the document language, property use, and burden on the servient estate.
From a valuation standpoint, these distinctions matter because they directly influence:
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Highest and best use
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Functional access
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Marketability and buyer perception
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Development feasibility
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Potential damages in partial takings
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Comparable sale selection and adjustment support
In other words: the legal characterization of the easement sets the foundation for the appraisal analysis.
The Title Commitment: Your First—and Most Important—Valuation Document
For appraisers, the title commitment is not just a checklist item. It is a valuation roadmap.
A carefully reviewed title commitment reveals:
1. Existing easements that may restrict buildable area or access
These encumbrances can depress land value, limit improvements, or create severance damages in right-of-way cases.
2. Encroachments or restrictions that reduce utility
Anything that restricts where improvements can be placed—or how they can be used—feeds directly into market value impacts.
3. Competing or superior rights
If a pipeline company, utility provider, or private party holds superior rights, the subject’s bundle of rights may already be diminished before any new acquisition occurs.
4. Prior dedications or plat notations
As the Keenan case illustrated, the presence of a public dedication transforms valuation because the owner cannot obstruct or control the corridor.
5. Recorded documents that appraisers must interpret
The title commitment references the documents; the documents define the rights. And those rights define the value.
For LPA’s appraisers, these details often make the difference between a routine partial acquisition and a complex severance damages analysis.
Why Reviewing Title Early Leads to Better Valuations
Many owners assume a title commitment can only be requested once a property is under contract. However, title companies can on request provide a preliminary commitment earlier, especially when:
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An agency anticipates a right-of-way project
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A landowner wants clarity before negotiations
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A developer needs feasibility insights
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A client wants to understand existing encumbrances before investing in due diligence
Getting the title commitment early helps ensure:
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Accurate scope of work
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Proper identification of affected property rights
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Correct easement area mapping
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Fewer valuation surprises
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More defensible conclusions
For public agencies and private landowners alike, this leads to clearer communication, smoother negotiations, and more reliable appraisal outcomes.
Putting It All Together: Why Easement Language Drives Value
A valuation is only as good as the understanding of:
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What rights exist
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What rights are being taken
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How those rights interact
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How the market responds to them
From access restrictions to prior dedications, easements can elevate value, suppress value, or create complex damages scenarios that require specialized analysis.
This is where LPA’s expertise matters.
How LPA Supports Accurate, Defensible Valuation
Lowery Property Advisors brings deep experience in analyzing the valuation impacts of existing easements, proposed acquisitions, and corridor-related takings. Our team interprets easement language, analyzes access implications, and delivers valuation conclusions that hold up under scrutiny.
Whether you’re preparing for a project, evaluating potential impacts, or navigating a right-of-way acquisition, our team ensures you understand not just the easement—but its influence on market value.
