Some neighbor disputes are frustrating.
Some are messy.
And then there are the ones that are so bizarre you almost have to laugh before you get annoyed.
This one blew up because it combines all three, and somehow still manages to feel completely real.

What Happened
The OP says this has been going on for years.
Their neighbor’s dog has repeatedly wandered into their yard and left a mess, sometimes even on their front patio. It got bad enough that they’ve had to regularly power wash to deal with it.
And this wasn’t a new issue.
They say they’ve been telling the neighbors for about three years to keep the dog on their own property.
Nothing really changed.
Then Came the Letter
Instead of finally fixing the problem, the neighbors took a very different approach.
They left a note in the OP’s mailbox along with $5.
In the letter, they said they wanted to “be good neighbors” and explained that their dog is large and needs exercise.
So their solution?
They asked if the dog could roam freely in the OP’s yard once a week for an hour.
And promised they would “immediately clean it” each time.
The $5 was meant as payment for the inconvenience.
The OP’s Response
The OP didn’t entertain it.
They returned the $5 and wrote back a simple no.
After years of dealing with the issue, the request didn’t come across as a compromise.
It just felt like a new way of asking for permission to keep doing the same thing.
Why This Blew Up
Because the logic behind the offer completely confused people.
It wasn’t just about the dog anymore.
It was the idea that someone could take an ongoing problem and turn it into a paid arrangement without actually fixing the behavior.
To a lot of readers, it felt less like a solution and more like entitlement packaged politely.
How People Reacted
Many comments focused on how unrealistic the offer was.
u/TraditionalStop8986 summed it up:
“Can I pay you $5 a week for my dog to crap in your yard because I can’t look after them properly.”
Others pointed out that the damage goes beyond just cleaning up.
u/Responsibility_Witty wrote:
“$5 doesn’t cover the damage a dog does to a lawn.”
Some responses leaned more toward solutions.
u/Interesting-Low5112 simply said:
“Lock gates. ‘No trespassing.’”
And others couldn’t get over the fact that someone thought this was negotiable at all.
u/blahblahblah1127 said:
“Who in this world is paying for their dog to poop?”
The Bigger Conversation
This turned into a broader discussion about responsibility.
If you own a pet, especially a large one, managing where it goes is part of the deal.
Trying to shift that responsibility onto someone else, even with money involved, doesn’t really solve the problem.
My Take
The wildest part isn’t even the dog.
It’s the framing.
After three years of complaints, the neighbors didn’t apologize or fix it.
They tried to formalize it.
That’s what makes it feel so out of touch.
The Real Question
At what point does trying to “work something out” stop being reasonable…
and start feeling like you’re just asking permission to keep crossing the same boundary?
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