A tenant returned home each evening only to discover their assigned parking spot taken by a neighbor they barely knew. For weeks the late-forties woman kept parking there as if it were her own, forcing the tenant to squeeze into distant visitor spaces, often in the dark or rain while carrying groceries.
The 30-year-old stayed polite at first, leaving a friendly note and speaking calmly when the neighbor appeared at their door claiming permission that did not exist. What began as a simple request quickly spiraled into loud accusations, passive-aggressive notes on the windshield, dangerously tight parking, and one day a car parked sideways to block her in completely.
A tenant stands up for their paid parking spot against a persistent neighbor’s entitlement.




































In this case, the original poster (OP) faced a classic entitlement clash: someone repeatedly taking a reserved parking spot that comes with the rent and lease.
The neighbor claimed “permission” from the landlord (which turned out to be false), suggested “sharing” the spot like it was a casual favor, and then flipped to accusations of rudeness and harassment when confronted calmly.
OP responded with notes, direct but friendly talks, and involving management, yet ended up dealing with retaliation like tight parking jobs and blocked exits.
The neighbor’s actions seem driven by a sense of convenience overriding rules, perhaps assuming politeness equals weakness or that “it’s not that serious” after weeks of repetition. Many would argue this stems from poor communication and a lack of respect for shared living boundaries in tight apartment settings.
Meanwhile, some might wonder if OP could have de-escalated faster, but documenting everything and looping in the landlord shows reasonable steps rather than knee-jerk reactions. The passive-aggressive notes and door-yelling suggest the neighbor felt entitled to bend norms, turning a practical issue into personal drama.
In multifamily housing, unclear or unenforced rules often spark resident friction, with studies noting that consistent enforcement reduces conflicts significantly. Illegal or unauthorized parking also contributes to wider urban headaches, ranking as a notable cause of congestion and delays in many areas.
“Talk to them at a time when it isn’t emotionally charged,” advises U.K.-based negotiations expert Steve Jones in a Newsweek discussion of neighborhood disputes. “What normally happens in neighborhood disputes, is people will talk to the other party at a point when they actually just want to kill them.”
This quote rings true here. The OP tried polite timing with a smiley-face note and calm requests, but escalation happened anyway, showing how emotions can hijack simple fixes. Jones’ point underscores why neutral third parties like landlords help: they remove the heat and focus on facts, much like mediation in property conflicts.
Neutral solutions often work best: document incidents with photos and dates, involve property management promptly for towing if needed (many complexes allow it for repeated violations), and consider dash cams for protection against retaliation.
Broader advice includes clear lease language on parking from the start and community guidelines that everyone signs off on. If things turn truly hostile, local tenant resources or even small claims for ongoing hassles can provide backup, though most cases resolve with firm, consistent enforcement rather than drama.
Here’s how people reacted to the post:
Some people believe the OP is NTA and should immediately call a tow truck every single time the neighbor blocks the driveway.




Some people believe the OP is NTA and should report the neighbor to the landlord while documenting everything.




A user believes the OP is NTA and suggest waking the neighbor in the middle of the night to make her move the car.


Another thinks the OP cannot afford to be polite with such entitled people and should respond harshly instead.



In the end, this parking saga reminds us how one “borrowed” spot can disrupt daily peace in shared living. Do you think the Redditor’s calm approach was fair given the weeks of inconvenience, or should they have gone full tow-truck mode sooner?
How would you handle an entitled neighbor testing boundaries in your own building? Share your hot takes below!


















