Iowa generally requires 10 years of open, hostile, exclusive and continuous possession under a claim of right or color of title to claim title by adverse possession, reflected in the 10-year limitation of Iowa Code Sec. 614.17A. Occupying claimants with color of title gain added protection under Chapter 560. Squatters lacking these elements are trespassers removable through court action.
Iowa has no single adverse-possession statute; the doctrine rests on case law and the 10-year limitation in Iowa Code Sec. 614.17A, which bars an action to recover real estate 'based upon a claim arising more than ten years earlier' against a record-title holder in possession. To gain title, a claimant must show possession that is hostile, actual, open, exclusive and continuous for ten years under a claim of right or color of title. Iowa Code Sec. 560.1 protects an 'occupant of real estate' who 'has color of title thereto and has in good faith made valuable improvements' before any execution to dispossess. A squatter lacking these elements has no ownership claim and is removed through forcible entry and detainer under Chapter 648.
An owner cannot use force or self-help to remove an occupant; removal must proceed through forcible entry and detainer under Chapter 648. A genuine 10-year adverse possessor meeting all elements may instead quiet title to the property.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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Polk County allows backyard composting but regulates it through the Health Nuisance Regulation: a compost pile that harbors vermin, produces offensive odors,...
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Polk County has no ordinance for or against artificial turf on residential lots. Installation on unincorporated land is generally unrestricted; cities and HO...
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Polk County has no ordinance banning native or prairie landscaping, and the county promotes native roadside vegetation. The one legal limit: your planting ca...
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Iowa has no state ban on collecting rainwater, and Polk County sets no rain-barrel ordinance. Residents may capture roof runoff in barrels or cisterns; only ...
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Polk County sets no lawn-watering schedule. Central Iowa's water is managed by Central Iowa Water Works / Des Moines Water Works, which can impose voluntary ...
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Iowa Code 317.10 requires every landowner to destroy all noxious weeds on their land as directed by the county board of supervisors. Polk County's Weed Commi...
See how West Des Moines's squatter's rights & adverse possession rules stack up against other locations.
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