The Passive Smoke Crisis Where A Neighbors New Roommate Turned An Apartment Into A Skunk Zone

Apartment living always comes with a few trade-offs, but sometimes those little inconveniences start to take over your entire space.

For this original poster, what began as a strange smell they couldn’t quite place has turned into a daily frustration that’s impossible to ignore.

Despite having no issue with what their neighbors choose to do, the lingering odor has begun seeping into everything, from clothes to furniture, and even raising concerns tied to their jobs.

After trying to handle things the proper way, they’re now debating whether to take matters into their own hands with a direct note. Keep reading to see how this situation is unfolding!

Tenant considers leaving note over neighbor’s strong smoke smell filling apartment

The Passive Smoke Crisis Where A Neighbors New Roommate Turned An Apartment Into A Skunk Zone
not the actual photo

'WIBTA If I left a note on my neighbors door telling them to stop smoking w__d?'

The leasing office is going to tape notes on

ALL tenants doors in our building as to not single anyone out.

However, we were not the first to complain.

Our maintenance guy also caught them smoking

in the breezeway of our building and told them to cut it out.

Hopefully the note helps, if not, I don't care enough to make it a bigger issue

and I'm only here for the next 8 months so smoke em if you got em I guess..

Alright bare/bear with me here...

My husband and I live in a pretty decent apartment complex, we're on the top floor,

and we are cool with most of our neighbors.

We're 90% sure about which neighbor is smoking the devils lettuce,

as it only really started when our next-door neighbors new roommate moved in.

I have nothing against smoking, in any capacity, but it's literally all our apartment

has smelled like the last few months. It's starting to permeate our clothes

and furniture it's so bad. My husband and I both work for the government

(and are d__g tested) so this is not ideal.

At first (before we realized what was actually going on)

we thought a skunk had sprayed near our apartment

and was just coming in through a window. Well, it's winter now, no windows are open,

and every day we wake up to and come home to SKUNK.

We have told the apartment complex about this, and nothing has changed.

WIBTA if I left a note on this neighbors door?

Something to the effect of "Hey fellow apartment dwellers, pot is fun.

However, consider blowing the smoke out into a paper towel roll

that has a dryer sheet at the end. Or vape it. Or eat it.

My entire apartment smells like skunky pot and I'm over it. Love, your neighbors".

Thoughts?

Edit: When we messaged the complex about it,

we didn't single out them or their apartment,

just said "someone in our building."

They actually have since responded saying that they'd

"send a message to our building about it," so we'll see what happens!

I'll hold off on the note/talking to them in person for now,

but if it continues I'm definitely considering buying two smoke buddies

and wrapping them up nicely in Christmas paper with a little (not aggressive) card.

Edit 2: Enough people are asking so I wanted to clarify, I do not live in a state where it is legal.

Sometimes the hardest part of shared living isn’t the noise or the space, it’s realizing that someone else’s habits are quietly taking over a place that’s supposed to feel like home.

In this situation, OP isn’t reacting to the idea of smoking itself, but to the loss of control over their own environment. Their apartment, which should feel safe and neutral, now carries a constant smell that affects their clothes, furniture, and even their sense of comfort.

There’s also an added layer of anxiety because of their jobs and drug testing, which makes the situation feel less like a minor annoyance and more like a potential risk.

At the same time, OP has tried to handle it in a low-conflict way, reporting it generally rather than targeting anyone directly, which shows an effort to avoid unnecessary confrontation.

What makes this situation interesting is how people perceive “shared responsibility.” The neighbor likely sees their actions as personal and contained, while OP experiences them as invasive. This difference often comes down to awareness.

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People tend to underestimate how far smells travel or how much they linger, especially with something as strong as smoke. From one perspective, it’s just a habit. From another, it’s an ongoing disruption that never really turns off.

According to experts, environmental stressors like persistent odors, noise, or lack of control over personal space, can significantly impact mood, focus, and overall well-being.

When someone feels they can’t escape a stressor in their own home, it often leads to heightened frustration and mental fatigue. This sense of “no control” tends to amplify reactions, even when the issue might seem small from the outside.

That insight helps explain why OP is feeling increasingly fed up. It’s not just about the smell anymore, it’s about the constant presence of something they didn’t choose and can’t easily avoid.

Over time, that builds into a deeper irritation, even if OP doesn’t want to escalate things further.

Looking at the situation more broadly, OP’s instinct to avoid direct confrontation isn’t wrong, but it also reflects a common tension: wanting peace without wanting to stay uncomfortable.

The idea of leaving a polite, slightly humorous note shows OP is trying to strike a balance between asserting boundaries and keeping things light.

Ultimately, this isn’t about being right or wrong. It’s about how much discomfort someone is expected to tolerate in a shared space.

If the leasing office’s approach doesn’t change anything, OP may need to decide whether maintaining harmony is worth ongoing frustration, or whether a clearer, more direct boundary is necessary.

Because at some point, feeling at ease in one’s own home stops being a preference and becomes a basic need.

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Here’s the comments of Reddit users:

This group, which includes regular smokers, emphasized that a polite note is the best first step

[Reddit User] − NTA. Me and my fiancé smoke weed regularly.

We would not be angry if we got a note like this.

A lot of people hate the smell of weed.

We have no problem using a smoke buddy and high-quality air freshener

to neutralize the odor as well as possible.

trash-account111 − NTA. As a smoker I appreciate when someone just tells me

they have a problem with the smell. Just tell them to try and smoke less.

But be clear you don't have a problem with weed, just the smell.

421AlphaQueen − NTA, I think a light hearted note would be good!

I would add that it’s making your apartment smell as well

These users raised a specific concern: the “Skunk” Factor

gratefullybuzzing − NTA, but if your clothes are smelling like weed

after you leave the apartment he probably doing more than smoking it.

Might be growing it.

UnsavoryBoy − They could be growing weed.

This might account for the smell being strong enough to permeate your clothing. Still NTA

dgreify − I agree with some commenters here.

If it smells skunky all the time your neighbors most likely have a grow in their place.

Burnt weed smells like smoke, but a grow smells like a dank sweet skunky aroma

and can be very strong.

These Redditors focused on the professional and health stakes

majesticjules − NTA Although I wouldn't necessarily word it that way.

Would you mind taking steps to minimize the smell?

It makes it into our apartment and it could adversally affect our jobs

if we are suspected of pot use.

rando1251 − NTA - my husband and I were in the same situation

and didn’t leave a note but went to the complex first and repeatedly.

Nothing was done. It was messing with my asthma since it was getting into our sheets,

clothes and my hair. Good luck with the note.

If you have to go to the complex hopefully they’re helpful.

Comedyfish_reddit − NTA: as people have said. Just write a nice note

“As we work for the government (FBI) we get tested a Lot” 😂

This group advised looking into legal and structural remedies

istara − NTA But the issue isn’t pot. It’s smoke drift.

Look up your bylaws on this. It’s increasingly an offence in apartments schemes.

addictedtochips − NTA - But I doubt it’ll work. That’s b__lshit

the complex hasn’t done anything! I would definitely keep fighting that if I were you.

I think the cops would be extreme, but I think it would be justified if you exhausted

ALL resources (even threatening them with law enforcement involvement).

I already hate marijuana being illegal,

but the fact your clothes even smell like it is disgusting.

OP is stuck in a frustrating gray area, respecting others’ choices while dealing with real consequences in their own space.

The smell isn’t just annoying, it’s affecting daily life and even job security, which raises the stakes beyond a simple neighbor dispute. Leaving a note feels like a practical solution, but it also risks escalating things or coming off passive-aggressive.

Is OP being reasonable for wanting clean air, or does the note cross a line? How would you handle a neighbor issue like this without making it worse?

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