Aussie homeowner cops $600 power bill hike after neighbour’s backyard decision

Neighbour disputes can be frustrating, but when they start hitting the household budget, tensions can quickly escalate.

One Australian homeowner has found herself in a costly predicament thanks to an unexpected issue growing right next door.

What started as a simple privacy measure has now turned into a financial headache, with little recourse available through official channels.


A New South Wales homeowner found herself battling skyrocketing power bills after her neighbour’s unchecked bamboo plants plunged her solar panels into shade.

Melanie McMahon, from Port Macquarie, said the towering bamboo along their shared boundary had doubled in height over the past year, now reaching 15 metres.

While she understood her neighbour’s desire for privacy, she was frustrated that the thick, fast-growing plants had rendered her 24 solar panels almost useless.


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Neighbour’s bamboo leaves a homeowner with soaring bills. Image source: Facebook/MelanieMcMahon


‘They planted it there for privacy, they didn’t want to see the pergola and solar panels and I understand that. But the bamboo is out of control, it becomes extremely thick and continues to grow,’ she said.

When Melanie first moved in, her property was completely off the electrical grid, thanks to the solar panels installed by the previous owner.

Now, however, they were generating only ‘5-10 per cent of their full capacity’, forcing her to rely on the electrical grid for power.

‘During daylight hours my house should be off the electrical grid but the sun is blocked by the bamboo…originally our power bill was $400-500 a quarter but now I’m at $1,000 because my solar isn’t working,’ she said.


The extra cost was adding up to around $2,000 per year.

On top of the financial strain, Melanie also had to deal with bamboo leaves regularly clogging her gutters, as her neighbour did ‘zero maintenance’ on the plants.

When she tried to discuss the issue, tensions flared, and her neighbour allegedly refused to trim more than 50 centimetres off the bamboo.

‘Melanie, I don’t need to care about that,’ the neighbour allegedly told her when she explained the impact on her home.


Frustrated, she sought help from her local council but was told they did not intervene in disputes between neighbours.

‘I called council but they flat out said they don’t get involved in disputes before neighbours, so my first port of call was no help,’ she said.

With no assistance from authorities, Melanie looked into legal options and discovered a loophole in existing regulations.

The NSW Tree Act, introduced in 2006 to address neighbour disputes, classifies trees or hedges over 2.5 metres as a ‘public nuisance’.

However, because bamboo is neither classified as a tree nor a weed, it falls outside these rules, leaving affected homeowners with limited options.

Residents facing similar issues are advised to seek mediation through a Community Justice Centre, with the possibility of escalating the matter to the Land and Environment Court.


Melanie was prepared to take the issue further but acknowledged that not everyone had the resources to pursue a legal battle.

‘Whether you’re elderly or whether you’re just not well versed in your own rights and responsibilities, it shouldn’t be this lengthy process…there should be more governance,’ she said.

She hoped that her situation would bring attention to the need for better protections for homeowners dealing with unregulated plant growth on neighbouring properties.


In a previous story, a Sydney homeowner found herself caught in a shocking neighbour dispute that took an unexpected turn.

The feud escalated over a controversial act that left the community stunned.

Read more about the unthinkable incident here.

Key Takeaways
  • A homeowner’s solar panels became ineffective due to her neighbour’s overgrown bamboo, causing her power bills to spike.
  • Her neighbour allegedly refused to cut it back, and the council would not intervene.
  • A legal loophole excludes bamboo from NSW Tree Act regulations, limiting her options.
  • She planned legal action but called for better protections for affected homeowners.

With neighbour disputes like this on the rise, do you think stricter regulations should be in place for overgrown plants?

Let us know your thoughts in the comments.
 

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Seems they have put them on the carport, most I have seen on are top of the house.

They're allowed to cut those right back if they overhang onto your property, whilst a pain in the a$$ that's what they need to do, offering a chance of more sunlight but if they keep growing, then the panels will be in the shade obviously.
 
I know this problem all too well. Never paid for electricity for several years due to generous feed back rebates, now I pay for electricity each quarter with minimal feed back tarriff included. I have given up all efforts of communication with my "once good neighbours". Tried for years to communicate civilly with them... phone calls, text messages, letters, photo evidence all get ignored. They say they will do something and never do anything. Can't afford legal representation or other means in QLD and because of the repercussions previously from them I just put up with it now and say nothing. From uncontrollable and too many dogs on property, trees uprooting my bitumen driveway, trees shading my solar panels, repairs to guttering and roof from overhanging trees, falling limbs off ghost gums damaging fencing....I have it all. So I fully understand your frustration.
 
It sounds to me like the council are shirking their responsibilities. They are meant to sort disputes between neighbours particularly when dealing with plants and trees and hiw it affects your property . This is a legitimate problem that should be sorted. I would put in writing thst if he doesn't cut them back so the sun gets to my solar panels I will have them cut back and give him the bill. His choice.
 
I'm not sure but I read somewhere a while ago that if a tree hangs onto your property you have every right to cut that section off yourself.
Don't quote me on that though, but it makes sense.
You are right there but although a portion do hang over her property it is actually the height the main plants hsve grown to that are actually causing the problem. They shouldn't be able to grow that high in the first place. Surely there is a height limit. I would be going back to the council and insist they come out and ring your local MP. There is an election coming up, see how good he or she is. You could get both State and federal involved. Good luck
 
I know this problem all too well. Never paid for electricity for several years due to generous feed back rebates, now I pay for electricity each quarter with minimal feed back tarriff included. I have given up all efforts of communication with my "once good neighbours". Tried for years to communicate civilly with them... phone calls, text messages, letters, photo evidence all get ignored. They say they will do something and never do anything. Can't afford legal representation or other means in QLD and because of the repercussions previously from them I just put up with it now and say nothing. From uncontrollable and too many dogs on property, trees uprooting my bitumen driveway, trees shading my solar panels, repairs to guttering and roof from overhanging trees, falling limbs off ghost gums damaging fencing....I have it all. So I fully understand your frustration.
I sympathize,our council would do nothing to help us with a rotted retaining wall put up by our back neighbours that had a sloped block.
Basically raised the whole back yard then filled in with dirt.Obviouslynthevwoid rotted and all their backyard started falling into Apparently they won't nothing to do with it because the fence was on top of the wall making it a fence issue.
It's been 6 years no.and still upsets me
We were ignored,given wrong untruthful information and basically "go to court" as the "let's talk it over mediation" didn't happen cos they wanted nothing to do with it.
Guess who ended up paying for everything to get fixed.Us to the tune of 4k.So yes sometimes,or should I say the majority of times,we are screwed by our councils and the non caring people that work for them in the relevant departments😩
 
I thought bamboo was a noxious weed. Weed killer sprayed from her side will help.
I however would be more worried about my sewer pipes. It has recently cost me $21,000 to have my pipes relined due to neighbors Camphor laurel tree breaking all the clay pipes.:cautious:
 
An old lady that lived in squalor behind us had bamboo all along her fence line, in the late afternoons and early evenings we'd watch the rats scrambling through it to our pomegranate tree then eat them.
After I left Perth she was put into a home, the clean up crew for inside the house that wore hazmat suits let my daughter and her friend in to have a look. She told me there was no bed and in the lounge room there was a giant termite nest, she said the place was disgusting.
 
  • Wow
Reactions: SandyM
am sure that there is an SDC member who can either correct or verify this but I am fairly sure that if a neighbours vegetation is hanging over your fence that you can cut down that part or branches that are over hanging your side of the fence, I think that this ruling would apply here, cuting down the top part of the Bamboo growth would go a long way to wards helping the Solar pannells get enough sunlight.
 
Hack off a good size bit and take it to a good nursery or closest plant/bamboo outlet. Even Bunnings may know variety. If invasive, they must rip it all out. That wld be lovely to watch 🫣
Ha ha, my mates mum and dad where getting to much sun on one side of their house, so they planted bamboo down the length of that side, well it shot up so quick and thick it became a major prob. with there guttering and pipes so they sorted out the pipe problem and his mum being a nousy green thumb gal, cut and thinned it out and ended up making garden barriers with the thick ends and bean crawlers with top ends. Gave them out to all her garden club mob and their family's, mate told her to sell em, response, nah, it's your dads old wire anyway.🎋
 
I'd poison the shit

An old lady that lived in squalor behind us had bamboo all along her fence line, in the late afternoons and early evenings we'd watch the rats scrambling through it to our pomegranate tree then eat them.
After I left Perth she was put into a home, the clean up crew for inside the house that wore hazmat suits let my daughter and her friend in to have a look. She told me there was no bed and in the lounge room there was a giant termite nest, she said the place was disgusting.
Yes ,I am understanding what you are saying,but that is hardly going to help this lady with her issue
Yes you can cut a tree branch etc if it's on your side,but this isn't a tree branch it's bamboo growing straight up and causing such a shadow ,it's rendering her solar panels useless.If it's not on her side of the fence,then I don't think she can just get a cherry picker and cut half the top off the bamboo,plus it will just keep growing.
These sort of issues is why we here neighbours have stabbed one another and set houses or cars alite.The situation becomes unbearable and sometimes it's best to just move.
I personally would set it alight😩🔥
I am do sorry that person is having to go through this without council assistance.
 
I thought bamboo was a noxious weed. Weed killer sprayed from her side will help.
I however would be more worried about my sewer pipes. It has recently cost me $21,000 to have my pipes relined due to neighbors Camphor laurel tree breaking all the clay pipes.:cautious:
Again,the innocent getting screwed once again
Sorry for your 21k loss Maybe karma will come your way.
 

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