Antisocial neighbours: Your rights and what action can be taken

4 min read
June 15, 2026

Noise at midnight, threatening behaviour in shared spaces, rubbish piling up, arguments spilling into hallways, a constant sense that something isn’t right where you live.

Antisocial behaviour (ASB) isn’t just irritating, it can make your home feel unliveable. And it’s not a niche issue  It’s consistently one of the top three categories of complaints made to the Housing Ombudsman, alongside property condition and complaint handling.

But when it happens, responsibility can feel unclear. Is it your landlord? The council? The police?

The answer depends on your situation, but whether you rent or own your home, there are clear routes you can take.

 

What counts as antisocial behaviour?

In housing, antisocial behaviour covers conduct that causes nuisance, distress or harassment to people nearby.

That can include:

  • Persistent loud noise (music, shouting, parties)
  • Harassment, intimidation or threatening behaviour
  • Vandalism or damage to property
  • Drug use or criminal activity linked to a property
  • Rubbish dumping or unsafe shared areas

Not every annoyance qualifies. Everyday living noise, footsteps, children playing, won’t usually meet the threshold. But when behaviour becomes persistent, aggressive or disruptive, it moves into something that should be addressed.

 

If you rent: your landlord should take action

If you’re a tenant, government research shows that landlords are “overwhelmingly seen as the first port of call” when people experience antisocial behaviour. 

Antisocial behaviour is often a breach of tenancy agreement, which gives landlords the power and responsibility, to step in.

In practice, your landlord should:

  • Acknowledge and log your complaint
  • Investigate what’s happening
  • Take proportionate action

That action might include:

  • Warning letters
  • Mediation between neighbours
  • Behaviour agreements
  • Legal action in more serious cases

They don’t have to jump straight to eviction, but they do need to take your complaint seriously and follow it up.

Government research shows landlords are typically seen as the first place people turn when dealing with ASB—but far fewer people are satisfied with how those complaints are resolved. That gap is where most issues arise.

 

If you own your home: your options are different, but still strong

If you’re a homeowner, you don’t have a landlord to escalate to, but that doesn’t mean you’re stuck.

If the neighbour is renting

You can still contact their landlord. Landlords remain responsible for their tenants’ behaviour, even if you don’t rent yourself.

If you’re unsure who the landlord is, your local council can often help identify them.

If the issue affects your environment

Your local council has legal duties to investigate certain types of nuisance, especially noise and environmental hazards.

They can:

  • Investigate complaints
  • Issue abatement notices
  • Take enforcement action if behaviour continues

This is particularly relevant for:

  • Noise complaints
  • Waste and rubbish issues
  • Health or safety concerns

 

If it becomes serious or criminal

For threats, harassment or criminal activity, the police should be your first call. Antisocial behaviour can overlap with criminal law, and in those cases, it moves beyond housing enforcement.

 

Why so many complaints still go unresolved

Despite these responsibilities, antisocial behaviour is one of the most complained-about issues for a reason.

Research from the Social Housing Resident Panel found:

  • 75% of people experiencing ASB reported it formally
  • But only 27% were satisfied with the outcome

That gap, between reporting and resolution, is where most frustration sits.

Common problems include:

  • Slow or inconsistent responses
  • Lack of communication
  • Failure to gather evidence properly
  • Passing responsibility between landlord, council and police

Understanding where responsibility lies can help you avoid getting stuck in that loop.

When the council should step in

Some antisocial behaviour, especially noise or environmental issues, falls under the council’s legal duties.

Local authorities must investigate complaints about “statutory nuisance”, which can include:

  • Excessive noise
  • Dangerous property conditions
  • Waste accumulation or pollution

If they find a nuisance exists, they can issue an abatement notice, requiring the behaviour to stop. Failing to comply can be a criminal offence.

Councils also have broader powers to deal with:

  • Vandalism
  • Intimidation
  • Public disorder

If you report an issue, the council must consider it and decide whether enforcement is appropriate. 

 

How to report antisocial behaviour effectively

Whether you rent or own, the way you report the issue can affect how seriously it’s taken.

Start by:

  • Keeping a log of incidents (dates, times, details)
  • Saving evidence (photos, videos, messages)
  • Reporting the issue formally, not just informally

This creates a clear record, which is essential if the case needs to be escalated.

 

What to do if nothing changes

If you’ve reported the issue and nothing improves, you have escalation options.

For tenants:

  • Use your landlord’s formal complaints process
  • Escalate to the Housing Ombudsman if unresolved

For homeowners:

For both:

You can request a Community Trigger (ASB case review) if:

  • You’ve reported the issue multiple times
  • No effective action has been taken

 

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This forces agencies to review how your case has been handled. Antisocial neighbours are one of the most common, and most frustrating, housing issues.

If you rent, your landlord should act. If you own, councils and other authorities still have powers.

In both cases, outcomes depend on how clearly and early the issue is raised:

  • Document what’s happening
  • Report it formally
  • Escalate if needed

Antisocial behaviour complaints often stall because they’re handled informally or inconsistently.

Resolver can help you:

  • Stay informed of your rights
  • Raise structured complaints to landlords or councils
  • Keep a clear record of communication
  • Navigate the correct channels to escalate, if you don’t get a response

That matters, because consistent, documented complaints become much harder to ignore.

If you have any thoughts on this topic, or any other consumer issues you would like us to cover, feel free to get in touch with us at support@resolver.co.uk 

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