Antisocial Behaviour in Residential Blocks: A Guide for RMC & RTM Directors
What is antisocial behaviour in a residential block?
Antisocial behaviour is any behaviour that unreasonably interferes with another resident’s use or enjoyment of their home. Within block management, it is typically behaviour that is persistent rather than a one‑off disagreement.
Common examples include:
- Excessive noise
- Harassment or intimidation
- Vandalism to communal areas
- Graffiti or fly‑tipping
- Nuisance caused by pets
- Drug‑related activity
The JMJ Commitment: Our approach to antisocial behaviour
- Acting proportionately and based on evidence
- Treating all parties fairly and respectfully
- Protecting RMC and RTM directors from unnecessary risk or cost
- Encouraging early, sensible resolution wherever possible
- Being clear about what falls within block management and what does not
Who is responsible for dealing with antisocial behaviour?
Responsibility is often misunderstood. Antisocial behaviour is not automatically the responsibility of the managing agent.
- Residents are usually expected to take reasonable initial steps themselves.
- RMC or RTM directors decide whether formal action is justified. For a clearer overview of director responsibilities, read our article on the Role of an RMC Director.
- The managing agent acts only on instruction and within the limits of the lease.
- Local authorities and the police handle statutory or criminal matters.
What can a managing agent do?
A managing agent’s powers come from the lease. Most leases include covenants preventing nuisance or annoyance, but enforcement can be complex, slow and costly.
JMJ Asset Management will:
- review the lease
- advise whether a breach may exist
- guide directors through proportionate options
We cannot take enforcement action without instruction and appropriate indemnity.
When should external authorities be involved?
Certain matters should be escalated externally:
- Persistent noise → local authority environmental health
- Fly‑tipping, graffiti, dog fouling → local authority enforcement
- Harassment, intimidation, violence or drug‑related activity → police
.
What should RMC and RTM directors do next?
If you are dealing with antisocial behaviour in your block:
- Review the lease and confirm responsibilities
- Ask for clear written evidence before escalating
- Avoid informal promises of enforcement
- Take professional advice before authorising legal action
JMJ Asset Management supports directors with clear, practical advice that protects the asset, the service charge and the people involved.
