Few things in suburban life spark more drama than parking disputes. One Reddit user recently shared how his neighbor had been using his driveway as free real estate, brushing off every polite request to stop with a dismissive “it’s just for a sec.”
But one Friday, when the homeowner was about to head out of town, fate handed him the perfect opportunity for a little sweet revenge. He pulled into his own driveway, parked directly behind the neighbor’s car, locked up, and left for the weekend.
Hours later, his phone lit up with missed calls and a desperate text reading, “dude wtf??” He didn’t answer. Instead, he let his neighbor marinate in the consequences. Want the full scoop on how Reddit reacted to this petty-yet-satisfying act? Let’s dig in.
A homeowner, tired of their neighbor parking in their driveway, blocks them in and leaves for a weekend trip, ignoring their complaints




This story perfectly captures the mix of petty justice and boundary-setting that so many people secretly dream about. OP’s neighbor had been warned repeatedly not to park in their driveway, brushing it off with the classic “just for a sec” excuse but as anyone who’s dealt with this knows, “a sec” often turns into hours.
So, when OP finally boxed him in and left for the weekend, it wasn’t just revenge. It was a boundary being enforced in the clearest possible way.
The funny part is how shocked the neighbor seemed afterward. His “dude wtf??” text shows he still believed he was the wronged party. That kind of entitlement is common in disputes over shared or misused property. In fact, neighborhood parking is one of the top triggers for community conflict.
A 2022 survey by YouGov found that 38% of urban dwellers in the U.S. had experienced disputes with neighbors over parking or driveway use. People treat driveways and curbs as extensions of public space, forgetting they’re often private property.
Experts note that this comes down to respect. As etiquette advisor Lizzie Post once told The Washington Post: “Your neighbor’s driveway is not overflow parking, and treating it as such without permission can damage relationships beyond repair.” OP’s choice to block the car in wasn’t just petty payback; it was a way of forcing accountability when politeness failed.
So what should someone in OP’s shoes do going forward? Installing a sign (“Private Driveway – No Parking”) and maybe even a cheap camera helps document repeat offenses. If things escalate, many municipalities treat blocking a driveway as trespassing, so local law enforcement can step in. But in reality, this one weekend probably sent the clearest message possible, that OP’s driveway is off-limits.
Here’s how people reacted to the post:
These users cheered the Redditor’s move, calling it a deserved lesson for the entitled neighbor








Many shared similar tales of trapping offenders or ignoring their complaints










This driveway showdown proves that boundary violations can push even the patient to petty revenge. Was the Redditor’s car-trapping tactic a genius checkmate or a risky escalation?
How would you deal with a neighbor who treats your driveway like their personal lot? Drop your hot takes below! what’s the best way to reclaim your space without starting a turf war?










