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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Neighbours trying to intimidate me over parking issues

272 replies

crispsbutty · 18/03/2026 13:59

I live on a small estate where each house has a driveway that can fit 2 cars. There’s also room on the street, so every house can accommodate at least 3 cars. The driveways are single file, which means people sometimes have to move their cars around, but that’s never really been an issue. Just for context, I live alone, so it’s a bit easier for me. I’ve been here for almost 7 years and was quite happy until recently when my lovely neighbours moved away in November. My new neighbours moved in, we introduced ourselves, exchanged greetings when we passed by, and everything seemed fine. However, things took a turn in January when their son (they’re a couple with a son in his 20s) got a transit van for work.

At first, they parked both their cars in the driveway and the van outside their house, swapping them around like everyone else. But a few weeks later, he started parking it outside mine. I figured it was just a one time thing and didn’t think much of it, but then he kept doing it every day, sometimes leaving it parked there for several days in a row. The thing is, my front garden is small, so the van ends up blocking my living room window, and honestly, it’s not great to look at every single day. I didn’t mind him parking there every now and then, but I thought it was a bit inconsiderate to do it all the time while leaving their own window empty. It also meant that my guests had to park further down the road and walk, when before they could park right outside. It’s a public road, so I never told them not to park there, but I did politely ask if they could switch it with one of their cars. They said no because the drive wasn’t wide enough for the van, and if they parked it in front of their house, they’d have to keep moving it to get the cars off the drive.

They were parking one car on the drive and one on the road, so they didn’t have to move either of them. I explained that it blocked my view and wasn’t pleasant to look at all the time, but they just repeated that it wasn’t possible to move it. There’s a small lay-by in the next street (you can see it from both our houses, and you walk through a little alley to get there) that isn’t in front of anyone’s house, so I asked if he could park the van there, but they said it wasn’t possible in case tools got stolen, etc, so that was that, and I never mentioned it up again.

Honestly, it bugged me for a bit and definitely soured the relationship, but there wasn't much I could do, so I just tried to ignore it. Then in February, my friend decided to sell her car. It’s an old Toyota Aygo and was very cheap, so I thought I'd grab it as a little runaround. I live up in the hills which can be a hassle, especially when my car is in the garage as the local bus only comes every two hours, making it difficult to get around and manage work. The car has an MOT until next year, it's taxed and insured, and I've been parking it outside my house. My main car is on the drive. I won’t lie, it was nice not having to see a big van every day too so that was definitely a bonus. A couple of weeks after I parked the car there, my neighbour asked if it was mine. I said yes, and asked if everything was okay. They brought up the van and mentioned it was difficult for them since they had nowhere else to park. I suggested the lay-by again or said they could park outside their own house (like everyone else), but they weren’t happy and asked me to put it on my drive since I wasn’t using it every day. I told them no, sorry, but they have space outside their own house, and I’m parking my car in the space outside mine. I probably could have been nicer about it, but they didn’t seem to care when they were blocking my front window and making it difficult for my guests, so I didn’t have much sympathy for them.

Since then, tensions have been high, and they’ve asked me several times to move my car. Now, they’ve started to block my driveway with their van (not completely blocking it, but the back end is hanging over, making it difficult to get in and out), tossing rubbish into my garden, and just generally being rude and trying to intimidate me. The last time I talked to them was on Saturday when they jokingly threatened to tow my car away (I have cameras at the front of my house). They were laughing but I could tell it was a threat. I doubt they would act this way if I had a partner.

Am I being unreasonable for saying that if they keep this up, I’ll call the police?

OP posts:
SandyHappy · 18/03/2026 16:58

CautiousLurker2 · 18/03/2026 16:49

Just to add to this, I’d get a Ring doorbell so that you can record them littering and blocking your drive - it’s actually an offence to obstruct a driveway with a car parked on it and with a dropped curb. You can then send them a cease and desist letter stating that if they persist you will send your video evidence and report them to the council and the police.

I do wonder about advice like this to be honest. Surely the best thing is just to ignore them completely, OP is doing absolutely nothing wrong, if they know it is getting to her, they may up the campaign of pressure or it may turn into a tit for tat situation where OP lives on edge wondering what is going to happen next.

I'd smile and wave at them and be friendly like you would any other neighbour, you've won! so just ignore/refuse any of their bullshit demands, they can't make you move a legally parked car anymore than you could make them move their van to in front of their own house!

Weeelokthen · 18/03/2026 17:00

Meh heh heh. Good on ye op.
My late mother got really stressed/anxious when a guy along the street started parking his big van outside her house blocking her view every day because it was easier for him to drive from there than his own drive.
Wish we had thought to get another car, genius.
X

Passingthrough123 · 18/03/2026 17:01

nomas · 18/03/2026 16:55

Sigh. You didn't read it properly. She asked them. They said no. She didn't dictate anything. She accepted it.

They are the ones bullying her for saying no to moving her car. They have asked her several times instead of accepting her answer. They're illegally partly obstructing her drive. They're tossing rubbish into her garden. They threatened to tow her car away.

So you didn't read it properly.

And if you think the neighbours are right then there is definite misogyny at play here,

Edited

Misogyny is your go-to comeback on just about every thread you comment on, so I honestly can't take you seriously. Just because I don't agree with the stance OP has chosen to take, doesn't mean I have a dislike of, contempt for, and ingrained hatred of women (the dictionary definition of misogyny). I am a woman myself. But nor do I think the NDN are in the right. She should be logging their litter throwing and making sure she's got a Ring doorbell recording.

HTH.

CautiousLurker2 · 18/03/2026 17:01

SandyHappy · 18/03/2026 16:58

I do wonder about advice like this to be honest. Surely the best thing is just to ignore them completely, OP is doing absolutely nothing wrong, if they know it is getting to her, they may up the campaign of pressure or it may turn into a tit for tat situation where OP lives on edge wondering what is going to happen next.

I'd smile and wave at them and be friendly like you would any other neighbour, you've won! so just ignore/refuse any of their bullshit demands, they can't make you move a legally parked car anymore than you could make them move their van to in front of their own house!

Perhaps, but collecting the evidence in case it ramps up and a letter is needed is sensible. The doorbell may actually make them think twice and stop as they will realise they can be seen, so in and of itself it may actually help resolve the issue?

Tableforjoan · 18/03/2026 17:03

Why does it matter why op purchased a second car.

It’s taxed, insured and has a valid mot.

It can park anywhere on a public road. Just like the neighbours van, when op kindly asked them to not park it there every day please.

What ops neighbours cannot do it throw rubbish in her garden, constantly try to get her to move her legally parked car or get it towed like they have “joked” to.

How many times I have I seen on Mumsnet parking threads the op told to buy an old junk car and take up the space… loads.

Smilesinthesunshine · 18/03/2026 17:05

Ohfudgeoff · 18/03/2026 14:56

Lazier than getting a second car 'just because' ?

How on earth is buying a second car lazy??

Whosthetabbynow · 18/03/2026 17:08

babasaclover · 18/03/2026 14:46

@crispsbuttyyou have to admit you bought it to annoy them. No one has a spare car to use just in case 😂. That said if you’ve got footage of them throwing rubbish etc report them. That’s not on

This was my immediate thought. They’ll see it as you bought the “spare” car (who does this btw) so you could make sure the van couldn’t park there. I can see how it would look goady.

Favory · 18/03/2026 17:10

Get security cameras up for the fly tipping and any other intimidation. Take dated and time stamped photos of the van blocking your drive. Report it all to the police.

Your neighbours are entitled arseholes who're pissed off that they have to look at their own fucking van outside their own window. Diddums.

Ireallycantthinkofagoodone · 18/03/2026 17:10

I have to agree with other posters who suggested you bought the ‘spare’ car so you could park it in front of your house. If that were not true, why not park it on your driveway, which you said was big enough for 2 cars?

Also, the car may have been cheap, but taxing and insuring a car as a ‘spare’ just in case, is ridiculous. Why not just hire one if/when necessary? Most garages also have loan cars for just this eventuality.

I would hate to have a large van outside my property so I sympathise, but hopefully the son will move out one day.

itsgettingweird · 18/03/2026 17:10

I’d the works van got a
company name on it?

When one had work and parking over the dropped curb to my drive before I’ve contacted the company - first off by email.

you can go to SM if needed as companies will not be happy with their employees parking company vehicles in a way that pisses off neighbours as it’s bad advertising!

nomas · 18/03/2026 17:12

Passingthrough123 · 18/03/2026 17:01

Misogyny is your go-to comeback on just about every thread you comment on, so I honestly can't take you seriously. Just because I don't agree with the stance OP has chosen to take, doesn't mean I have a dislike of, contempt for, and ingrained hatred of women (the dictionary definition of misogyny). I am a woman myself. But nor do I think the NDN are in the right. She should be logging their litter throwing and making sure she's got a Ring doorbell recording.

HTH.

How can I take you seriously when you say OP is dictating to them when she only asked them once and accepted their answer?

Anyway, it seems we agree now that NDN are not in the right.

GertrudePerkinsPaperyThing · 18/03/2026 17:12

To be fair, I’ve often seen pps advise an OP to buy a spare car and park it like this when there’s a similar issue with a van!

SandyHappy · 18/03/2026 17:13

CautiousLurker2 · 18/03/2026 17:01

Perhaps, but collecting the evidence in case it ramps up and a letter is needed is sensible. The doorbell may actually make them think twice and stop as they will realise they can be seen, so in and of itself it may actually help resolve the issue?

Very true, collecting evidence is a very good idea if she has it for if it does escalate, but I'd say confronting them, acknowledging the issue in any way is probably not a great idea.. if they were reasonable considerate people they wouldn't have chosen to block her window when they could have blocked their own, it can and probably will get worse if she confronts them.

My friend started a one man crusade when someone in a house across the street starting parking his van outside their flats, completely blocking the kitchen window of a nice older lady who lived below him.. the bloke refused to move it as 'his wife didn't want it parked outside their house' it infuriated my friend and he tried all sorts to get him to stop, letters, reporting him, but the van was parked legally and there was nothing he could do.. some people are just inconsiderate twats and you have to beat them at their own game like OP has done.

There's no point her wasting any more energy on a problem that she has already solved.

Tableforjoan · 18/03/2026 17:15

SandyHappy · 18/03/2026 17:13

Very true, collecting evidence is a very good idea if she has it for if it does escalate, but I'd say confronting them, acknowledging the issue in any way is probably not a great idea.. if they were reasonable considerate people they wouldn't have chosen to block her window when they could have blocked their own, it can and probably will get worse if she confronts them.

My friend started a one man crusade when someone in a house across the street starting parking his van outside their flats, completely blocking the kitchen window of a nice older lady who lived below him.. the bloke refused to move it as 'his wife didn't want it parked outside their house' it infuriated my friend and he tried all sorts to get him to stop, letters, reporting him, but the van was parked legally and there was nothing he could do.. some people are just inconsiderate twats and you have to beat them at their own game like OP has done.

There's no point her wasting any more energy on a problem that she has already solved.

We have it with verge parking. People churning up all the grass no fucks given. Leaving litter as well. Right outside our properties.

One man got some big boulders and put them on the verge outside his house, slowly but surely all the houses are copying.

Makes my heart smile seeing the inconsiderate wankers not be able to park on the verges anymore.

RollOnSunshine · 18/03/2026 17:16

Block in the van with both of your cars. He will probably need to move more than you do.

Anyahyacinth · 18/03/2026 17:18

With you OP ...I'd hate my view out being blocked by a high vehicle ...sorry you are going through this 🌸🌷🌸🌷🌸

Imisscoffee2021 · 18/03/2026 17:21

So, they were within their rights to park the van there, yeah its annoying and a shit view but they weren't doing anything wrong.

You're also not doing anything wrong by parking your car there, and tbh even if the neigh ours had the high ground, they've totally fallen to the lowest of the low with their subsequent intimidating behaviour. If I were you I would threaten to call the police and keep a log of every antisocial bit of behaviour, to show longevity and escalation.

crispsbutty · 18/03/2026 17:24

Passingthrough123 · 18/03/2026 16:46

But it wouldn't be that close to your window if parked on the street at the end of a two-cars-long driveway?

My driveway runs down the side of my house and I have small front garden, so, yes, it’s right outside my living room window. Not sure why you think I would lie about that?

OP posts:
Passingthrough123 · 18/03/2026 17:31

crispsbutty · 18/03/2026 17:24

My driveway runs down the side of my house and I have small front garden, so, yes, it’s right outside my living room window. Not sure why you think I would lie about that?

Who said anything about lying? I was asking how close it was given the length of the drive. You've now explained the set up, which makes it clearer.

crispsbutty · 18/03/2026 17:36

Passingthrough123 · 18/03/2026 17:31

Who said anything about lying? I was asking how close it was given the length of the drive. You've now explained the set up, which makes it clearer.

You didn’t ask. That was a statement.

OP posts:
Villanousvillans · 18/03/2026 17:41

Tableforjoan · 18/03/2026 17:03

Why does it matter why op purchased a second car.

It’s taxed, insured and has a valid mot.

It can park anywhere on a public road. Just like the neighbours van, when op kindly asked them to not park it there every day please.

What ops neighbours cannot do it throw rubbish in her garden, constantly try to get her to move her legally parked car or get it towed like they have “joked” to.

How many times I have I seen on Mumsnet parking threads the op told to buy an old junk car and take up the space… loads.

This ^ 👏

diddl · 18/03/2026 17:44

If only the drive was big enough for the van to fit on!

AgnesMcDoo · 18/03/2026 17:45

The spare car to protect your view is a seriously advocated idea on another parking thread 🤣

they’ve got the right to park their van legally anywhere on the street

youve got the right to park your ‘spare’ car anywhere legally on the street

these are just facts

what they don’t have the right to do is threaten you and harass you

keep a log and start reporting this to the police

SunnyRedSnail · 18/03/2026 17:47

crispsbutty · 18/03/2026 17:24

My driveway runs down the side of my house and I have small front garden, so, yes, it’s right outside my living room window. Not sure why you think I would lie about that?

I voted YABU.

I'm not condoning their behaviour (it's nasty) but they legally parked their van, you asked them to not park there as it blocked your light (it was your choice to buy/rent a house where a car can park close to your window) and then you have deliberately bought a second car to park in front of your house so they can't park there.

Again, I'm not condoning their behaviour, but your own behaviour comes across VERY petty - no one buys a second car for themselves just in case their other one is in a garage. You get a hire car or a courtesy car.

So basically your own petty actions have pissed off some petty but nasty people.

WishingIwasyoungerandslimmer · 18/03/2026 17:50

TheDenimPoet · 18/03/2026 16:40

It still doesn't matter. It might be selfish of them, morally, but there's absolutely nothing you can do about it.

There is something the OP can do about it though.

Get a second car and park it on the street outside her house.

But, oh yes, she did exactly that. And good on her!

Then she gets complaints on here for doing what people have told her. That anyone can park outside of her house. Anyone that is apart from the OP herself according to some on here for some strange reason!