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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To report my neighbours?

66 replies

Amybelle88 · 01/07/2026 13:35

I’ll try to be thorough with this post so as not to drip feed.

We moved into our house last September. We are on the end of a row of houses. Our next door neighbours seemed nice enough, as did the rest of the neighbours on the row. Before we moved in, we renovated a bit, so were coming to and from the house. I spoke to our next door neighbours and in conversation she told me that “Our neighbour (the other side of her) has told us that our dog howls and barks when we are out. We didn’t even know until we moved in here and she told us.” I assumed at the time it was a problem that had been raised, and since she was no aware of it, she had fixed it.

Until we moved in.

My husband and I both WFH. When I say the dog starts the second they walk out of the door until the minute they get home, I am not exaggerating. It is relentless. I literally know the dog's barking pattern, it barks 4 times, takes a breath, barks again. I don’t know how the fuck it isn’t horse, they must give it a packet of soothers when they fuck off out.

The neighbours on the other side are also tearing their hair out and she wears two bloody hearing aids! She’s had enough, as have we. Some days it can be 10/12 hours, my neighbour said she's had 16 hour days of it.

We have told them about it - they are fully aware. His attitude was “I’ve got a dog, innit.” They were offended that we even brought it up. It came down to shouting in the street and they’re now playing the victim because they got shouted at after over 12 months of trying to get them to sort it. We are all at breaking point.

They’ve also told us we need to be patient.

They think leaving the dog from 9-6 is an acceptable time frame for it to be alone, as he has openly told us this.

My husband has tried to offer advice - we have a dog who is crate trained and she goes in with a blanket over the crate if we go out. She also sleeps in there by choice. It was a hard slog training her to do this but we knew it was necessary as she’s a vocal dog (beagle) and we couldn’t put our neighbours through the noise if, for example, we needed to go shopping/run errands. She’s not often left on her own, especially not for long periods of time, but we understand that there’s times when that can happen.

We don’t expect a dog to be silent - we are all dog people on this row and have our own.

They literally do not care and it’s become more and more evident as they have treated us like we are the nuisance.

Also a big pot smoker and does it right under our young daughter's bedroom window and around his own child when standing on the step. This isn’t necessarily related to the post, but wanted to put it in as another example of just how not arsed they are about their neighbours - I don’t care if someone wants to smoke pot, your life, your choice, but I expect a bit of consideration. Our daughter has sobbed because we’ve had to keep her window closed when it’s roasting or her room is like a mushroom cloud.

I was also accused of holding back a parcel because it was delivered to my house and I didn’t then take it to them when they were home, which isn’t very fucking often cos we have to listen to the dog having a mental breakdown constantly. He was told to knock for his own parcels and he’s lucky we even took it in as common courtesy tends to go out of the door when your neighbours are actively telling you that their lives are miserable because of your dog and you don’t give a fuck.

Should I now report this? They say the dog has food and water and is well loved - in the whole 12 months I’ve lived here I’ve seen it once - they don’t walk it and I never see it use the toilet in the back garden, either. I would be lying if I said I didn’t feel like reporting it was a big step, but we also feel really sorry for the dog, too, it’s obviously really distressed, but also, we are at our wits end. It’s affecting our lives in a big way and has ground us down.

I’ve had pancreatic cancer and deal with acute bouts of pancreatitis on a chronic basis - the pain is very, very intense and listening to the dog on top of being in pain is fucking torturous.

Every single activity has the background noise of a dog - watching tv, working, cooking, cleaning, taking a bath, trying to get an extra half an hour in bed at the weekend, even just thinking.

Does anyone have any other options to try and fix this, or have been there themselves? I wish I was exaggerating about how long this goes on for every single day, apart from a Tuesday because the woman is off work.

OP posts:
Jellylasagnafortwo · 03/07/2026 18:36

Report her approaching your Dh to the police.
Report Him smoking weed next to his dd to social services.
Report the neglect towards the dog to the RSPCA.
Find out what trust she works for and report to them too.

Yetone · 03/07/2026 18:37

Yetone · 03/07/2026 18:07

With regards to the ring doorbell, I would make a point of constantly going and opening the front door and then coming back. They will soon get fed up of being alerted by it.

Alternatively tie something to your front door that will blow in the wind and then they will get constant alerts.

JohnofWessex · 03/07/2026 20:31

Amybelle88 · 03/07/2026 13:36

I have another update…

I can’t believe the fiasco over their dog barking.

They’ve now fitted a ring doorbell but it’s angled to look onto my drive. Is this legal? I’ve got absolutely nothing to hide but it does feel like we are now being spied on.

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/guidance-on-the-use-of-domestic-cctv/domestic-cctv-using-cctv-systems-on-your-property

Guidance on the use of domestic CCTV

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/guidance-on-the-use-of-domestic-cctv/domestic-cctv-using-cctv-systems-on-your-property

Namechangenicknackeronnie · 03/07/2026 22:03

CluckYeahCluck · 01/07/2026 15:58

I expect they're the sort of people who wouldn't consider giving it one of those training collar things which give a tiny tiny tiny electric shock when it barks. They DO work and I think it's not cruel because the dog susses it pretty quick and problem solved.
What IS cruel is all you guys being subjected to it
So keep a diary, all of you, and put in individual complaints plus a group petition to the Council (plus HA if applicable?)

Good luck. I'd be tempted to kidnap it myself and drop it outside a very distant dog rescue place-
( Joking! before everyone tells me off 🤗)

Sorry, which bit are you joking about, the kidnapping or torture? lol, not.

How would you like it is someone used electric shocks to try and “train” you were you were distressed, not much I bet.

Yes, these people are shitty and it’s not fair on the op, but it’s even less fair on the poor dog.

Amybelle88 · 03/07/2026 23:28

Thanks everyone for your advice - I done some jet washing this afternoon. 4 hours of it. They’re noisy those jet washers, aren’t they?!

As soon as I’d finished and went back inside, they left the house so maybe the doorbell is to make sure we aren’t around when they come in/out. Who knows - sometimes I think people do this stuff to feel in control but if they’re trying to catch me with anything they’ll get bored so fast because I am absolutely boring 😂

I’m going to get a trellis and some nice climbing flowers so they can’t see my front door - the rest of my drive is obscured by tall trees. I honestly can’t believe this is an issue.

The dog barked as soon as they went out, of course 🙄

After she went to hit my husband he called her a scummy mummy, it went down like a lead balloon…

OP posts:
CluckYeahCluck · 04/07/2026 10:03

Joking about the kidnapping. Not joking about the collar. It delivers the tiniest tiniest electric shock possible, and it's called a Training collar for a reason - it's just training, and the dog will learn almost immediately not to bark. I obviously know there's shed loads of folk who don't approve, but personally, having lived next to 2 different homes where the dog barked and barked all day long, I approve more of the collar than the dog's 'right' to torture us all.. I wish dog owners were more considerate of human beings. Some are, but huge numbers are not. It's actually rare to meet a dog which is trained in any way, eg that comes straightaway when called.

Jellylasagnafortwo · 04/07/2026 10:07

CluckYeahCluck · 04/07/2026 10:03

Joking about the kidnapping. Not joking about the collar. It delivers the tiniest tiniest electric shock possible, and it's called a Training collar for a reason - it's just training, and the dog will learn almost immediately not to bark. I obviously know there's shed loads of folk who don't approve, but personally, having lived next to 2 different homes where the dog barked and barked all day long, I approve more of the collar than the dog's 'right' to torture us all.. I wish dog owners were more considerate of human beings. Some are, but huge numbers are not. It's actually rare to meet a dog which is trained in any way, eg that comes straightaway when called.

Edited

So the dog continues to be left all day but with the added bonus of an electric shock each time it barks?
Maybe the owners need to wear one which gives a shock each time they neglect their dog?

CluckYeahCluck · 04/07/2026 17:44

The dog almost immediately learns to not bark. That's the whole point of the collar. So it is definitely not suffering. They're not only used on dogs btw - Similar ones are used for example on cattle to confine them to certain grazing areas without using fencing. Etc. They're getting more and more common. If I had a dog which I loved, and it wouldn't stop barking, I'd put one on my beloved dog. It really does learn very fast. And it's only the tiniest weeniest shock, really.

Yetone · 04/07/2026 18:33

I don’t think the shock collars are used anymore. My friend used one that sprayed citronella into the dogs neck instead. The dog did not like the smell and it very soon learned not to bark. The dog became much more relaxed after this.
Note it sprayed it onto the neck not face.

Ilikewinter · 04/07/2026 18:42

I think the fact that you rent gives you the advantage here because neighbour disputes have to be declared when selling - but that won't be your problem! So yes I would phone the police and report drug driving, especially as they are doing that on school runs, and report the dog barking. If you can get the other neighbour to also complain the better. Oh I'd also report the threat to your DH and get your own doorbell camera so you also have evidence of any escalation.
Finally, if all else fails I'd move.

Allseeingallknowing · 04/07/2026 18:45

No OP, it’s a dog, not a horse! Sorry-you have been nominated for the Viscous attack thread!

Allseeingallknowing · 04/07/2026 18:48

ClairDeLaLune · 01/07/2026 13:56

I would report the dog barking AND the neighbour smoking pot.

They won’t do anything unless the neighbour is dealing.

LivingwithHopenowandforever · 04/07/2026 19:14

@Amybelle88 You are doing the right thing in reporting the dog barking. I am a dog owner who is very mindful of my dog barking. Even if he is in the garden in the evening and starts barking we either correct or bring him in. As a dog owner we have to be considerate to all of our neighbours. I would hate to be the dog owner who disturbed anyone. The only time his barking is acceptable is if he hears something or someone, he is a guard dog after all. No dog should be barking that long and if your neighbour is telling you that, that is the case the dog owner has to correct and repeatedly check in with neighbour. It is a privilege to own a dog not a right. Just ask my kids and they will tell you that my dog is at the top of the hierarchy in our house. I feel blessed to have such a beautiful dog and he is just like one of my kids.

re the pot smoking can you hold off on reporting at the moment I just feel like it could massively blow up.

Report the barking and the way she went at your husband. All out war will not be good for everyone.

Maybe try dropping a note through the door asking if you could just sit down and discuss and hear one another. It would help to get the other neighbour involved. They might be open to it, the worst they could do is ignore or refuse.

Amybelle88 · Today 19:37

Allseeingallknowing · 04/07/2026 18:45

No OP, it’s a dog, not a horse! Sorry-you have been nominated for the Viscous attack thread!

What?!

OP posts:
Foodieasfuck · Today 19:57

We experienced similar a few years ago. I spoke with environmental health. They were really helpful. They advised me to report it to them formally and to gather the signatures of as many neighbours as possible on the letter (which was easy) we were all so fed up with it. I also recorded it at unsociable hours on my phone and submitted that too. They wrote to the lady and sent me a copy. It did help - she shut the poor thing inside so it wasn’t as agitated and didn’t bark quite as much. They’ve moved now. Thank god! I hope you can get a solution - good luck!

IronEverything · Today 20:47

I'm sorry you are dealing with this. My advice is to annoy the hell out of the police. Sadly nothing is usually done until you do. So just keep on reporting everything and hopefully they'll take the poor dog away and you'll just be left with the delightful owners to deal with.

What are their jobs? If he's risking people's health or safety by working under the influence then I'd report that too.

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