New homeowner confronts party-throwing neighbors next door: 'It’s not a once-in-a-while party. It’s basically every weekend!'

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  • A house is covered with string lights for a party.
  • "Bought a house thinking 'finally, peace,' and now I’m living next to weekend chaos"

    I closed on my first house about 4 months ago. It's a pretty normal suburban neighborhood, mostly older couples and young families,
  • people wave but don't really get in your business. When I toured the place, the house next door was empty and kind of run down,
  • so I figured worst case it would sit for a while. I was so focused on the inspection, roof, the weird smell in the basement, all that stuff, that I honestly didn't even think about "what if the neighbors are a nightmare". Like,
  • how do you even vet that? You get one 10 minute look at the street and you're supposed to gamble your sanity on it.
  • About a month after I moved in, the next door house sold. The first week seemed fine: a couple in their 30s, friendly in that shiny realtor way, big SUV, lots of Amazon boxes. Then the weekends started. Friday night,
  • music loud enough that I can feel the bass in my living room. People showing up in groups, laughing and yelling outside, car doors slamming, someone always "just needs to grab something" from their trunk at 1am. Saturday
  • is the same but earlier, and Sunday is the recovery day where they still sit outside with drinks and talk loud like they're on a patio, not ten feet from my bedroom window. The part that
  • gets me is that it's not a once-in- a-while party. It's basically every weekend, and sometimes Thursday too. I work early. I'm not a saint but I'm also not 21 anymore.
  • I tried to handle it like a normal human. First time, I waited until morning and went over, smiled, said hey I'm next door, congrats on the place, just wanted to ask if they could keep it down after like 11 because the walls are thin and
  • I can hear everything. They were super apologetic, "oh my god we had no idea", promised it wouldn't happen again. Next weekend, same thing. I texted them (they asked for my number, I regret that now). They replied with a thumbs up, then turned it down
  • for maybe 20 minutes and it crept right back up. Last weekend I went over again around midnight because it was honestly ridiculous, and the husband did this little half-laugh like I was being dramatic. He
  • said, "It's Saturday dude, people are gonna have fun," and then he hit me with "we're not breaking any laws." Technically he might be right. It's not like there's a specific ordinance posted on a sign, and I'm not trying to be the neighborhood cop. But I bought
  • this house to have a home, not to hear someone's playlist through my drywall while strangers s e on their porch and toss beer cans in the bushes between our yards.
  • I found two bottles near my sprinkler line this morning, like come on. Now I'm stuck in this weird place where I feel like if I call the non- emergency line I'm escalating,
  • and if I do nothing I'm basically teaching them they can steamroll everyone. I'm also worried they're the type to retaliate in petty ways, and I really don't want a war with the people who live 15 feet away. Has anyone dealt with
  • neighbors like this who act friendly but basically refuse to change? How do people choose houses when you can't know this stuff until it's too late?
  • A guy dances with friends partying behind him.
  • SadExercises420 · . Look up your municipal noise code and start reporting them. It might escalate but it's not going to get better until you do something Make sure you have some cameras up on your property
  • parodytx. Noise ordinances. Quiet hours. These should be codified by your local municipality.
  • When it hits 2301 hours (or whenever the quiet hours starts), then call the cops. and file a complaint. EACH. AND. EVERY. TIME. It will get results, starting with citations, then with arrests if they keep it up.

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