A covenant that runs with a land is a covenant that transfers when ownership of the attached land transfer. The future owner of the property subject to a covenant that runs with the land is bound by that covenant.
A property covenant is an agreement between two or more parties regarding certain use of a piece of real property. The covenant will either benefit or burden the landowner. A covenant that burdens the landowner is also called a restrictive covenant.
There are two types of restrictive covenants: affirmative and negative.
In a covenant that runs with the land, the subsequent landowner of property subject to the covenant will continue being burdened or benefited by the covenant. This is in contrast to a personal covenant, or a covenant that only binds the original parties of the covenant and will not pass to the subsequent parties.
To decide whether a covenant will run with the land, different jurisdictions look for different elements. The four standard elements to establish a covenant that runs with the land include:
The same jurisdiction can also look for different elements when the covenant burdens rather than when it benefits the landowner.
[Last updated in July of 2022 by the Wex Definitions Team]