At first, it sounds like a harmless situation.
A kid playing basketball after school.
But where the hoop is placed completely changes everything.
Because in this case, it’s not just noise. It’s constant impact, property damage, and a neighbor who refuses to care.

What Happened
The OP says they’ve lived in their home for about three years without issues.
Then, two weeks ago, their neighbor installed a portable basketball hoop.
Not in the middle of the driveway.
Not near their own house.
But right up against the property line, with the backboard sitting just inches from the OP’s exterior wall, directly next to their master bedroom.
The Daily Reality
Every afternoon around 4 PM, the neighbor’s teenage son starts playing.
And every missed shot sends the ball slamming into the side of the OP’s house.
Loud thuds.
Repeated over and over.
Sometimes continuing until 9 PM or later.
The noise is constant, rhythmic, and unavoidable.
It’s Not Just Noise
The problem doesn’t stop at sound.
The ball regularly ends up in the OP’s garden.
And instead of going around, the kid walks straight through the landscaping to retrieve it.
Hydrangeas snapped.
Hostas trampled.
Plants the OP spent time and money on getting destroyed.
The Attempt to Fix It
The OP tried to handle it calmly.
They spoke to the neighbor and asked if the hoop could just be moved a few feet away.
Not removed. Not banned. Just adjusted.
The response?
A shrug.
And “it’s a free country.”
Why That Made It Worse
That one sentence told the OP everything.
This wasn’t an accident.
It wasn’t oversight.
It was a decision to prioritize convenience over someone else’s space.
Why This Blew Up
Because the situation crosses a line.
This isn’t just kids playing outside.
It’s repeated impact on someone else’s home and ongoing damage to their property.
And people online immediately picked up on that distinction.
How People Reacted
Many commenters focused on the legal angle.
u/Impossible-Archer648 said:
“If the ball is actually hitting your house and damaging landscaping, that’s no longer just ‘kids playing,’ that’s property damage.”
Others pointed out the neighbor’s attitude as the real issue.
u/HeckThattt wrote:
“It’s a free country doesn’t mean you can damage someone else’s property.”
Some suggested documenting everything, billing for damages, or even escalating to small claims court.
The Debate
There were two main camps.
One believed this could still be solved with firm communication and evidence.
The other felt the neighbor had already made it clear he wasn’t going to cooperate, meaning legal or physical barriers might be the only solution.
The Bigger Issue
What made this story resonate is how targeted it feels.
The hoop wasn’t placed randomly.
It was placed in the one spot that affects the OP the most.
Right by their bedroom.
Right against their wall.
My Take
At this point, it’s no longer about compromise.
The OP already tried that.
Once someone dismisses a reasonable request and continues behavior that causes damage, it stops being a neighborly issue and becomes a boundary issue.
The Real Question
If someone knowingly sets up something that disrupts your home every single day…
and refuses to move it even slightly…
are they being inconsiderate, or intentionally choosing not to care?
More from Willow and Hearth:
- 15 Homemade Gifts That Feel Thoughtful and Timeless
- 13 Entryway Details That Make a Home Feel Welcoming
- 11 Ways to Display Fresh Herbs Around the House
- 13 Ways to Style a Bouquet Like a Florist

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