The Housing Ombudsman has highlighted the wide range of issues raised by noise complaints cases ahead of publication later this month of the outcome of a systemic investigation it has undertaken.

The Ombudsman said its forthcoming Spotlight thematic report is based on hundreds of complaints and insights about noise from more than 400 landlords and residents. It will make recommendations and share learning across the sector. 

The report focusses on the need for landlords to respond appropriately to noise depending on whether it concerns reports about household noise rather than anti-social behaviour. Most landlords conflate the two issues, it suggested.

Among the decisions published by the Housing Ombudsman featuring a noise issue are:

Richard Blakeway, Housing Ombudsman, said: “These cases give a small glimpse of the type of cases we’ve seen concerning noise and already provide learning for other landlords across the sector. We know that noise is a major cause of complaints but, unlike repairs, is debated less despite its complexities.

“Our Spotlight report brings together learning from a review of more than 800 noise related cases that we’ve dealt with over three years together with insight from the 374 responses to our call for evidence plus interviews with front line staff and residents of some individual landlords.

“The report will set out why strengthening the sector’s response to noise nuisance is essential. Noise costs; it costs individuals their mental health and well-being and it costs landlords in protracted and often futile interventions, multi-agency liaison and staff morale. These costs are underestimated and may be avoidable, to some extent, by adopting the different approaches that will be set out in the report.”

The Housing Ombudsman will be running a webinar to follow the publication of its spotlight report which will take place on 16 November.

Lottie Winson