Fence

Fences are blocks similar to Walls, which cannot normally be jumped over. Unlike walls however, they allow the player (but not mobs) to see through them, making for excellent barriers.

Breaking
Wooden fences are broken most quickly with an axe, but drop when broken with any tool. Nether brick fences require a pickaxe; mining it with anything else destroys it and drops nothing.

Natural generation


Oak fences generate as part of:
 * Regular Mineshafts, as the uprights for the supports, where they are plentiful.
 * Library rooms of strongholds as railings and chandeliers. In the latter case, there are many torches attached to them.
 * Plains villages
 * Woodland mansions
 * Shipwrecks

Spruce fences generate as part of:
 * Swamp huts
 * Taiga and snowy tundra villages, where they appear in tables, animal pen, butcher and shepherd houses, lantern lamp post, and other buildings.
 * Shipwrecks

Birch fences generate as part of:
 * Woodland mansions
 * Shipwrecks

Jungle fences generate as part of:
 * Desert village armorer houses as the window.
 * Shipwrecks

Acacia fences generate as part of:
 * Savanna villages, where they appear in tables, animal pen, butcher and shepherd house, stilt house buildings, and other buildings.
 * Shipwrecks

Dark oak fences generate as part of:
 * Mineshafts generated in badlands biomes, as the supports.
 * Woodland mansions
 * Shipwrecks
 * Pillager outposts, as part of watchtower, tent, cage, and scarecrow.

Nether brick fences generate as part of:
 * Nether fortresses, where they form window bars, balcony fencing, and gate-like structures.

Barrier
While fences appear to be a single block tall and have a hitbox height of one block, their collision box (for entities) is 1.5 blocks tall, meaning most mobs cannot jump over them without the Jump Boost status effect. They are transparent to light and have visual gaps in the model.

A fence occupies the center space of blocks and automatically connects to any solid block that is placed next to it. Wooden fences connect to other wooden fences, but do not connect to nether brick fences.

Leads
Fences can be used to attach mobs with a lead.

Fuel
Fences made from wood can be used as fuel in furnaces, smelting 1.5 items per block.

ID




Block data
$$, fences use the following data values:

Trivia

 * If a carpet is placed on top of a fence, a player can jump onto the carpet, while mobs cannot (except rabbits).
 * Getting hit by someone else (or shooting yourself with a Punch enchanted bow while sprinting forward) while in midair can cause the knockback to propel you over a fence you would not be able to jump over normally.
 * Placing a carpet on top of a fence does not reduce the fence or wall collision box down to one block, it just provides a platform one block high around the fence/wall to make it easier for climbing on the top of the fence.
 * Projectiles get stuck in the collision box of the fence and remain there if shot from upward.