She Kept Ringing Their Doorbell At All Hours For Her Packages, Then Refused To Fix The Problem

Living in a converted house with multiple flats usually worked surprisingly well for this couple. Everyone mostly kept to themselves, but neighbors were polite, helpful, and understanding when little issues popped up. If a package accidentally ended up near the wrong entrance, someone would simply move it inside so it stayed safe until the owner picked it up.

Then a new tenant moved into the back flat, and suddenly a small inconvenience turned into a daily source of stress.

The woman’s packages constantly kept getting delivered to the front entrance instead of her separate back entrance. At first, the couple tried to be accommodating.

They understood mistakes happen. But over time, what could have been solved with a quick update to her delivery instructions became a routine disruption to their lives.

And eventually, one sentence from the neighbor changed the entire tone of the situation.

She Kept Ringing Their Doorbell at All Hours for Her Packages, Then Refused to Fix the Problem
Not the actual photo

Here’s how it all unfolded.

'Neighbour keeps ringing our bell for her parcels at all hours, refused to have a civil conversation. How can I handle this?'

Moved into a house converted into multiple independent flats. One of the flats is at the back of the building with a separate entrance.

Someone moved in there a few months ago and ever since, her parcels keep getting delivered to our side/front entrance instead of hers.

The people in the building are generally really nice and usually if parcels are left outside, whoever sees them just places them safely inside for the correct flat to collect...

Previously someone else lived in that back flat and when their mail accidentally came to us, they rang once, we explained the setup, and the issue basically stopped.

This new tenant has made it a constant thing. At first we didn’t mind opening the door for her, but it’s become excessive.

She started incessantly ringing our bell at 7:30am for parcels (my fiancé works nights some days and was sleeping).

Then apparently rang again around noon and again around 3pm after I came home from work.

I finally went downstairs and politely told her that we’d appreciate her not ringing our bell repeatedly because my fiancé is asleep

and that she should look into fixing her address maybe so that it doesn’t get delivered to the front end of the house.

(For context, underneath our doorbell we’ve literally written not to ring unless it involves our flat, because random deliveries and people constantly pressing it has become disruptive.)

She just stared at me and said, “If my parcel is delivered here I will continue ringing your doorbell. I can’t help it”

Then she barged past me into the building, grabbed her parcel, and walked off..

We genuinely were accommodating before, but it’s becoming increasingly difficult because it happens so often and at unreasonable hours.

How do I deal with this? Speak to landlord/management because from the interaction she refuses to have a civil conversation? Or is there a better way to handle it without...

EDIT: i live in a house with multiple units. i am NOT the one bringing her parcels in at all. other unit owners do, as a kind gesture. she has...

TL;DR: Neighbour’s parcels keep getting delivered to our entrance instead of hers, and she repeatedly rings our bell at unreasonable hours to collect them.

Politely asked her to stop and she became rude about it. How would you handle this?

The original poster explained that their fiancé sometimes works night shifts and sleeps during the day. Because of that, random interruptions became more than just mildly annoying. The tenant from the back flat would repeatedly ring their doorbell whenever a parcel arrived.

Not once. Repeatedly.

One morning, she started buzzing the bell at 7:30 a.m. Later that same day, she reportedly rang again around noon, then again around 3 p.m. after the poster returned from work.

That might sound minor on paper, but anyone who has dealt with interrupted sleep knows how quickly resentment builds. Especially when the issue has an obvious solution.

The couple had even placed a note under their bell specifically asking people not to ring unless it involved their flat. Apparently that did not matter.

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Eventually, the poster decided to speak with the neighbor directly. Not aggressively. Not confrontationally. Just honestly.

They politely explained that the constant buzzing was becoming disruptive, especially because someone in the home was trying to sleep after night shifts.

They also suggested the tenant update her address details or delivery instructions so parcels would stop ending up at the wrong entrance in the first place.

Instead of responding calmly, the woman reportedly stared at them and said:

“If my parcel is delivered here I will continue ringing your doorbell. I can’t help it.”

Then she walked past them, grabbed her package, and left.

That interaction completely shifted the situation. Before that moment, the issue sounded like an annoying logistics problem. Afterward, it started sounding like entitlement.

The most frustrating part for the poster was that nobody in their household was even causing the problem. Other residents in the building had been bringing the packages inside as a courtesy so the parcels wouldn’t get stolen.

The tenant had reportedly lived there for over six months and still had not corrected her delivery instructions.

At a certain point, kindness started turning into unpaid customer service.

A lot of people reading the story focused on one important detail: the couple never agreed to become permanent package handlers. They were simply trying to be decent neighbors. But repeated disruptions, especially after being politely addressed, changed the emotional dynamic completely.

There is also something uniquely exhausting about someone refusing to acknowledge a solvable issue. Most people can tolerate inconvenience when they see effort being made. What drives tension is when one person essentially says, “This is your problem now.”

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And that is exactly how many readers interpreted the neighbor’s response.

Another layer here is how modern apartment living quietly depends on cooperation. Shared spaces only function smoothly when people recognize basic boundaries.

Sleep schedules, noise levels, deliveries, parking, laundry rooms, all of it relies on mutual consideration. Once someone openly rejects that social contract, even small interactions start feeling hostile.

Here’s how people reacted to the post:

Many commenters said the solution was simple: stop bringing her packages inside altogether.

gentle_twilight − I’d stop bringing them inside at all and let the delivery apps humble her into fixing the address

Wanderer--42 − Stop collecting them. Leave them at the door and she can pick them up. Make sure to tell her that you will no longer be bringing her packages...

multipocalypse − At that point I'd inform her that if she can't correct the delivery issue on her end and also insists on harassing you for something she has the...

marking her packages as "not at this address" and sending them back. Eta: u/Sea-Imagination-1836, aww, thanks!

Others suggested disconnecting the doorbell during sleeping hours or formally contacting the landlord or property management.

Several-Honey-8810 − Unhook the doorbell Sign that says no trespassing and instructions how to do special delivery accommodations on Amazon--with pictures.

BoysenberryDue3637 − Don't touch them when they show up. Leave them on the stoop. I know you want to be nice but this is a her problem not a you...

EmergencyNo5762 − Change the doorbell to one you can turn on and off, and turn it off at unsociable hours.

A few people also pointed out something interesting. From the neighbor’s perspective, she may feel frustrated that her packages keep disappearing into an area she cannot directly access.

Londundundun − I can kind of imagine the reverse of this… “I just moved into a new flat and the people there keep taking

my packages into their locked area I can’t access so now I have to wait until their convenience to retrieve my s__t” Just leave them outside.

If she hasn’t asked for you to put them in, why are you or the others touching them at all?

ILoveHotDogsAndBacon − “The next time you ring my bell at 7:30 am I will ring yours at 3am”

lemony197236 − Leave her parcels out front, she can deal with the porch pirates or fix her delivery instructions.

No_Brother_2385 − ? Umm, no brainer. Tell her "we will not take your parcels into our flat. If they're delivered to our door, we will leave them outside.

Going forward there will never be a parcel of yours in our flat. Please do not ring the bell or we will call the police"

The couple tried being patient. They tried being neighborly. They even attempted a calm conversation before considering escalation. But once someone repeatedly disrupts your home life and refuses to acknowledge your concerns, protecting your peace stops being rude.

Sometimes the healthiest thing you can do is stop solving problems that were never yours to begin with.

And honestly, after six months, updating a delivery address seems a lot easier than starting a hallway feud over doorbells.

 

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