AITA: A prior tenant keeps showing up to my home banging on the door and honking?
A new renter faced relentless intrusions from the evicted prior occupant demanding mail at her doorstep. Aggressive honking, doorbell ringing, and banging disrupted her peaceful home just weeks after moving in. In addition, what makes the story more complicated is the woman’s online stalking and refusal to update her address properly.
Safety concerns escalated when packages vanished and police got involved, revealing privacy breaches like informed delivery misuse. The renter, a solo female with a small dog, chose caution by ignoring demands and documenting everything. This saga exposes the frustrations of junk mail persistence and the boundaries tenants must enforce against unhinged predecessors.

‘AITA: A prior tenant keeps showing up to my home banging on the door and honking?’
Junk mail flooded the new tenant’s mailbox addressed to the previous renter from day one.


Aggressive drive-bys began with honking and demands, raising immediate red flags.









Harassment from former tenants often stems from denial about their eviction and poor planning. Here, the prior renter’s aggressive tactics ignore basic postal protocols, turning a simple address update into repeated confrontations. Opposing perspectives might sympathize with her cast or potential important mail, but nothing justifies stalking or theft suspicions.
What makes the story more complicated is the small-town dynamics enabling quick police response yet failing to deter her return in another vehicle. Broader issues include postal service inefficiencies with return-to-sender labels and privacy loopholes in informed delivery.
As USPS spokesperson Darleen Reid-DeMeo notes, “Customers are responsible for filing a Change-of-Address order to ensure mail forwarding” (source: USPS official guidelines). This places the burden squarely on the evictee.
In addition, new renters benefit from proactive measures like cameras to build evidence without direct engagement.
Here’s what the community had to contribute:
Many users backed the renter’s caution, urging stronger legal steps to halt the intrusions.














A couple of commenters suggested practical postal fixes while validating her stance.


Others added light-hearted takes to deflate the creepiness.



The new tenant handled persistent harassment by returning mail, involving authorities, and avoiding direct contact, all reasonable given the eviction history and privacy invasions. While the prior occupant’s actions suggest desperation or fraud, the renter owes no personal service. Resolution likely requires official address changes and possibly restraining orders.
How can renters better protect against mail mix-ups with problematic predecessors? What privacy safeguards should services like informed delivery include to prevent stalking?
