
My neighbours complain about my dog barking - could they report me?
I moved into my terraced house towards the end of 2024. Earlier this year, a new couple moved in next door.
My new neighbours seem very nice, and they get up early and go to bed early.
A few weeks ago, they knocked on my door and explained that they kept hearing my dog barking at about 10pm at night. I do usually let my dog out into the garden at 10pm so he can go to the toilet. My dog does tend to bark then, but he's not out for long.
The neighbours also mentioned that they could often hear my dog barking during the day, when I occasionally let him out into the garden.
I do want to be a good neighbour. What practical tips can you give me to stop my seven month year-old dog from barking so much?
And if the neighbours still aren't happy, what action could they take against me?
Jane Denton of This is Money replies: It is commendable that you want to resolve this issue and avoid a dispute with your neighbours.
Your neighbours sound like reasonable people who don't want to upset you, but want to address the impact your dog's barking is having on their lives.
I sense this scenario will be resolved by some training work with your dog. However, if things were to escalate, your neighbours could take action against you, as you suspected.
I have asked a legal expert and two dog behaviour experts for their thoughts on your matter.
Manjinder Kaur Atwal, director of housing law at Duncan Lewis Solicitors, says: If your dog's barking continues to disturb your neighbours, and informal conversations do not resolve the issue, they do have legal options available under the law of nuisance and environmental health regulations.
The main route for the neighbour would be to raise a complaint with the local council's environmental health department.
Under the Environmental Protection Act 1990, councils have a duty to investigate allegations of a statutory nuisance.
Noise is one such category, and repeated, intrusive dog barking - especially if it happens late at night or for long stretches during the day - could fall under this definition if it is considered to be unreasonably interfere with someone's enjoyment of their home.
In practical terms, the local authority may ask the neighbour to keep a log of the incidents of disturbance.
Environmental health officers could also install monitoring equipment or conduct visits to assess the noise level and frequency.
If the council agrees that a statutory nuisance exists, they can issue a Noise Abatement Notice requiring you to take steps to reduce or eliminate the barking.
Failure to comply with such a notice is a criminal offence. This can result in a fine of up to £5,000 for residential premises, or even more for commercial ones.
The council also has powers to seize the source of the noise in extreme cases, though this is very rare in domestic dog-related matters.
Separately, your neighbour could pursue a civil claim in nuisance.
If they choose to go down this route, they would need to prove that the barking constitutes an unreasonable and ongoing interference with their property.
If successful, a court could issue an injunction ordering you to take action, and possibly award damages.
It is also worth noting that if the issue escalates or is prolonged, and particularly if the council becomes involved, it could potentially impact the property's value or saleability. In some cases, disputes of this nature are required to be disclosed during conveyancing.
The best course is always to resolve these issues amicably before they escalate.
Keep lines of communication open, and show a willingness to find practical solutions - whether through training, limiting outdoor time, or even consulting a dog behaviourist.
If action is taken early enough, you will avoid legal risk and ultimately preserve a good neighbourly relationship.
Dr Tom Mitchell, founder of vet behavioural practice Behavet, says: Barking in the garden, whether it's late at night or during the day, usually comes down to two things.
First, your dog is either worried or excited about noises or movement beyond the garden fence.
Second, they've simply had lots of practice barking out there. The more they rehearse barking, the better they'll get at it. Soon enough, it becomes their automatic response in that situation.
The good news is, with a few practical tweaks, you can help your dog make better choices in the garden.
Talk to your neighbours. Let them know you've heard their concerns, you appreciate them mentioning it and that you're working on it. People tend to get louder when they don't feel heard, so we can ease tensions right away with this step.
Now, onto your dog. For the next three weeks, every time your dog goes into the garden, go with them. Keep them on lead, treats in hand.
Why? Because we need to stop them from rehearsing the barking routine. Instead, we can reward what we do want. Catch the moments when they're not barking and feed them a piece of food for these quiet choices.
Next, show them that distractions are nothing to get worked up about. When something interesting or noisy happens, like a neighbour, a dog walking past, even a bird tweeting, feed your dog before they react.
By timing treats with these distractions, you're teaching your dog that they're 'none of my business' and that the best thing to do when there is a distraction is to come and find you.
You can also play a fun game to fast-track this skill, teaching your dog to ignore things happening outside the garden or behind the fence.
With your dog on a lead in the garden, so he can't run around and bark, toss a treat towards the fence. When he eats it and turn towards you for the next piece, jackpot them with three or four treats in a row.
This teaches your dog that the centre of the garden is far more rewarding than the perimeter. It also builds the skill of disengagement or noticing something but choosing to move away from it.
Over the next few weeks, you'll be turning your dog's habit of barking into a habit of choosing disengagement, winning yourself happier neighbours and a calmer dog.
Dr Anne McBride, chair of the Association of Pet Behaviour Counsellors, says: While some dogs are more talkative than others, all communicate by sighing, whining, singing, howling, growling and barking.
Each type of utterance has various intonations, pitch, rhythms and associated silent signals of body language, facial expression, eye movement, and ear position enabling dogs to give many nuanced messages.
Dogs bark to alert us, to get our attention, or when they are anxious, frightened, lonely, bored, excited, playing, frustrated, or communicating with other dogs in the neighbourhood. If dogs bark a lot, the owner needs to check they are getting sufficient company, mental and physical exercise daily.
At night I suggest taking your dog out on a lead and walk him around the garden, saying nothing until he starts to go to the toilet.
Then say your toileting cue, for example, 'be clean', praise him, and when he is finished give him a treat, and take him indoors for another special treat.
You are teaching your dog a nightly routine: go to the toilet and then bed. You can also practise the toileting cue when he stops to toilet on a walk.
For the day, make the garden an interesting and quiet adventure playground. This requires owner involvement.
Several short five to 15-minute fun breaks throughout the day are needed for you to guide your dog's play. Have a ball game, give your dog food in an activity ball and praise him while he is using it.
Practice cues that he knows, hide toys and teach him how to search for them by name.
Dogs are social and smart. If we do not give them things to do, they will find things to do.
How to find a new mortgage
Borrowers who need a mortgage because their current fixed rate deal is ending, or they are buying a home, should explore their options as soon as possible.
Buy-to-let landlords should also act as soon as they can.
Quick mortgage finder links with This is Money's partner L&C
> Mortgage rates calculator
> Find the right mortgage for you
What if I need to remortgage?
Borrowers should compare rates, speak to a mortgage broker and be prepared to act.
Homeowners can lock in to a new deal six to nine months in advance, often with no obligation to take it.
Most mortgage deals allow fees to be added to the loan and only be charged when it is taken out. This means borrowers can secure a rate without paying expensive arrangement fees.
Keep in mind that by doing this and not clearing the fee on completion, interest will be paid on the fee amount over the entire term of the loan, so this may not be the best option for everyone.
What if I am buying a home?
Those with home purchases agreed should also aim to secure rates as soon as possible, so they know exactly what their monthly payments will be.
Buyers should avoid overstretching and be aware that house prices may fall, as higher mortgage rates limit people's borrowing ability and buying power.
What about buy-to-let landlords
Buy-to-let landlords with interest-only mortgages will see a greater jump in monthly costs than homeowners on residential mortgages.
This makes remortgaging in plenty of time essential and our partner L&C can help with buy-to-let mortgages too.
How to compare mortgage costs
The best way to compare mortgage costs and find the right deal for you is to speak to a broker.
This is Money has a long-standing partnership with fee-free broker L&C, to provide you with fee-free expert mortgage advice.
Interested in seeing today's best mortgage rates? Use This is Money and L&Cs best mortgage rates calculator to show deals matching your home value, mortgage size, term and fixed rate needs.
If you're ready to find your next mortgage, why not use L&C's online Mortgage Finder. It will search 1,000's of deals from more than 90 different lenders to discover the best deal for you.
> Find your best mortgage deal with This is Money and L&C
Be aware that rates can change quickly, however, and so if you need a mortgage or want to compare rates, speak to L&C as soon as possible, so they can help you find the right mortgage for you.
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Almost everything about Covid was bad, obviously. The virus itself, the pain it inflicted across the world, the restrictions on individual liberty, and the banging of pots with wooden spoons on our doorsteps every Thursday evening (astonishing to think this is the country that came up with Magna Carta, and yet over 800 years later we'd regressed to the point where we decided to show our appreciation by behaving like deranged toddlers with a set of kitchen equipment). On the other hand, it shifted our body clocks forward a bit, did it not? It did for me, anyway. Pre-Covid, an 8pm table booking was no problem. Splendid, in fact. Dinner out with friends, nothing could be lovelier. Post-Covid, it seemed mad. Practically wanton. Be out at that time, away from my home? Only sitting down for dinner at 8pm? What is this, Spain? Now, if I'm meeting pals for supper, I generally try to get away with a 7.30 booking, although ideally 7pm. That allows plenty of time for chit-chat but means we can still be in bed by 10. If friends are coming over for dinner, I often say to them airily 'any time from 6.30' in the hope this means I might be tucked up with my book even earlier. At any sign of lingering over the coffee and bag of Minstrels, I start loading the dishwasher. It's enormously relaxed, an evening with me. Last November, while having dinner with friends in New York – 'the city that never sleeps' – I practically fell asleep at the table because our reservation was for 9pm (although I suspect jet lag and the three margaritas before dinner didn't help matters much). But a friend across the pond says there's been a more general shift to earlier eating even there. And yet there remain among us a good number of psychopaths who want to eat at 10.30pm, or even later. I'm not referring to our southern European friends; various London restaurants have recently announced that they're opening reservation slots for later tables. Mountain, a Soho restaurant where I once tried tripe (not for me), is now offering punters the chance of a slot at 10.30pm. Tomos Parry, the co-founder and chef of Brat, a very trendy Shoreditch restaurant, says he's noticed late-night diners creeping back. If you fancy a plate of extremely spicy noodles, you can book a table at Speedboat Bar, an excellent Thai restaurant also in Soho, until 12.30am on Friday and Saturday nights. This has been hailed as a 'late-night dining revolution', which I don't remember Marx banging on about much. Restaurateurs are, naturally, delighted. Times are hard, getting punters in to eat is challenging, especially when everyone's on the fat jabs, so if they can keep throwing out plates until the wee hours for those who do want to eat, so much the better. Jeremy King, restaurant impresario, has recently unveiled a new late-night menu at his new-ish joints, The Park and Arlington. Book a table after 9.45pm and you get 25 per cent off. Notably, these are all fairly central London restaurants, and I wonder how many of their late-night clientele live reasonably close. Or at least only one zone away. Well-heeled sorts who don't baulk at the price of fillet steak and can totter home or hail a black cab for a fare under a tenner. Because if you book a table at 10.30pm, you're not going to be heading home much before midnight. The trains have stopped running back to my parts by then. There's the odd night bus if I don't mind two hours crawling southwards, or it'll be a £50 Uber. Bed by 1am, maybe, which isn't hugely practical if you have to work for a living, or have small children, or a small and unruly terrier who demands his first outing to the park at 6am. That's to say nothing of the potential digestion issues. 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We shared a burger and the bill came with a small pot of Smarties, which seemed the height of ironic decadence. He paid and afterwards walked me back through the dark streets of Chelsea to put me on the N137 home to Stockwell, so it was a relatively chaste evening. Not the sort of thing that gets poets excited. But it felt practically Byronic to me – the late night, the Smarties, the slow meander to the Sloane Street bus stop. I swooned about it for months once safely back at boarding school. I understand it, in other words. I understand that late-night dining can be exciting, and romantic, possibly even a little dangerous if your alarm is going off soon. But my appetite for danger must have waned in the intervening 23 years because dicey behaviour these days means going to sleep after 11pm. Perhaps this is more to do with age than Covid. Or both. Still, if restaurants are increasingly catering for daredevils who wish to risk indigestion and trapped wind, those of us who prefer 7pm tables may stand more of a chance. Or maybe even 6.30pm. Could you make 6.30?