The reality of life, unfortunately, is that you cannot choose your neighbours. So what can be done if your neighbour from hell is making a racket?

The first action should always be to knock on the door, speak to your neighbour and ask them to tone it down a bit.

As a mediator, I always recommend that if a solution can be found by agreement, you are always better and bearing in mind also that you will have to continue to live beside these people into the future.

Podcast:  Noisy Neighbours

No compromise
If you don’t get any satisfaction you can always consult a solicitor and ask the solicitor to write a letter to them and if they are rent-paying tenants also send the solicitor’s letter to the landlord.

With an apartment complex or gated community, you can consult the management company because in all title documents there are covenants & agreements to say that occupiers of a property will not cause a nuisance to others.

You could also call the Gardaí but in the case of a gated community or apartment complex, they have limited powers. If the noise is not disturbing people on the street then a public nuisance is not being created so they cannot intervene.

There is also the option of going to the local authority if it is a local authority house.

Take them to Court
As a last resort, you could go to the District Court and swear out a nuisance summons. The first question you would be asked by a judge in those circumstances is whether you had exhausted all other options.

Relief can also be sought from the Private Residential Tenancies Board (PRTB) in the case of noise being caused in private rented accommodation. The Residential Tenancies Act 2004 imposes minimum statutory obligations on landlords and tenants of private residential tenancies.

Tenants have an obligation under the act not to engage in anti-social behaviour and it imposes an obligation on landlords to enforce the tenant obligations. There is also a provision in the act for third parties who are adversely affected by a failure on the part of a landlord to enforce tenant obligations to refer a complaint to the PRTB in accordance with the procedures set out in the Act.

The PRTB also has sophisticated methods for resolution available. There is an online telephone mediation system, a conciliation system and a Quasi-judicial method for resolution.

How noisy is too noisy?
Just because you can hear your neighbours or they occasionally play loud music, does not make them neighbours from hell. You will have to show that the noise was “so loud, so continuous, so repeated and of such a duration or pitch or occurring at such times that it gives you reasonable cause for annoyance”.

A log of incidents of noise and copies of correspondence will help you to prove that this was the case. Evidence is a key factor in those sorts of cases.

The court, if it agrees with you, has the power to order the offending party to abate the noise or cease it. The court can apply penalties, including fines for non-compliance but is unlikely to suggest that the neighbour from hell return from whence he came!


For further advice or if you wish to discuss any other legal area please contact reception@lynchsolicitors.ie or telephone 052-6124344.

The material contained in this blog is provided for general information purposes only and does not amount to legal or other professional advice. While every care has been taken in the preparation of the information, we advise you to seek specific advice from us about any legal decision or course of action.