What would you do if someone kept parking on your private driveway, even after you politely asked them to stop? One UK mom decided she’d had enough after catching the same woman using her space again and again. This time, she blocked the car in while juggling two kids, one desperate for the toilet and the other crying for attention.
Her story lit up Reddit, where commenters were quick to decide if she was out of line… or if she delivered a well-deserved lesson.
A mom, fed up with a stranger parking in her driveway, traps their car to get her kids inside during a potty emergency















OP later provided an update:





Sometimes calm defiance is the only thing that works. In this story, a stranger repeatedly parked on the homeowner’s private driveway despite being asked not to, and today blocked access again.
Rather than jockey for a legal fight, OP prioritized her children’s urgent needs: a screaming toddler who desperately needed the loo, and a baby who wouldn’t stop crying. Temporarily boxing the car in until her husband could return wasn’t about pettiness, it was about survival.
From a legal standpoint in the UK, parking on someone’s driveway without permission is indeed trespass, but only a civil offense, not criminal.
The RAC states that while such parking may be “abhorrent,” there’s no criminal law against it, and police generally cannot intervene unless there’s additional obstruction or danger. Even councils have no power to remove a non-abandoned car from private property.
Moreover, parking enforcement laws in the UK centre on public roads, known as Decriminalised Parking Enforcement, which apply only in controlled zones or for dropped kerb violations. They don’t cover vehicles parked on private driveways.
Behavioral and social studies recognize that these scenarios often highlight informal boundary enforcement. As Dr. Rachel Aldred of the University of Westminster explains, “When formal systems don’t provide remedies, residents resort to informal enforcement.” In this case, OP’s informal enforcement was a quick, pragmatic solution, not a vendetta.
Neutral advice:
- Document the incidents: ave footage or messages showing prior warnings.
- Contact police or the council using the non-emergency number if this behavior repeats; having a record helps.
- Invest in physical deterrents: a chain, bollard, or drop-down post to clearly assert your driveway as private.
Here’s what the community had to contribute:
These users applauded OP, calling her a “legend” for finally standing her ground



Some noted she’d been more patient than most and deserved to enforce her boundaries



This person even wished she’d made the woman wait longer, though acknowledged that might have escalated things


This group said towing or calling police would’ve been justified, given the repeated trespassing






This one pointed out the quirks of UK law, technically OP risked trouble by blocking a car across double yellow lines



In the end, a mom just wanted her toddler to use the bathroom and her baby to stop crying. Instead, she wound up teaching a repeat offender that driveways aren’t free parking spots. While she admits she was a bit of a “d**k” in tone, Reddit crowned her a hero for holding firm.
What do you think? Was she justified in blocking the stranger, or should she have moved her car straight away to avoid the drama?








