The enforcement team can investigate complaints of high hedges only when certain steps have been made by the complainant beforehand. Please read the information below to see if your complaint meets our criteria.
Report a high hedge
You can report high hedges by:
It is not an offence to have a hedge over the height of 2 metres and it is not for the council to prove that it causing a nuisance, our job is to decide (based on various calculations) on whether a hedge is adversely affecting the ‘reasonable enjoyment’ of a property and what, if any action should be taken to remedy the problem and prevent it from happening again.
This legislation is very specific about what a high hedge is, what ‘reasonable enjoyment’ is and what steps that must be taken before a complaint can be made to the council.
In cases where a complaint has been accepted and proved the council can only order that the hedge is reduced to a height that will remedy the problem, this may be higher than 2 meters.
Basic legislation criteria
- The hedge is growing on land owned by someone else
- It is acting to some degree as a barrier to light or views
- The hedge is made up of 2 or more trees or shrubs
- It is mostly evergreen or semi evergreen
- It is more than 2 metres tall
- You are the owner/occupiers of the property affected by the hedge
- The property is residential
If you want to make a complaint
Complainants must be able to demonstrate that they have taken all reasonable steps to resolve the problem by negotiation before an approach is made to us. Even though a dispute may have been going on for many years, new evidence of a serious attempt at amicable resolution will be required to validate any formal complaint application.
Complainants are advised to either speak to neighbours or write a polite letter advising of concerns.
If agreement cannot be reached, the matter may be subject to independent mediation as recommended by the Government.