Noise problem in my flat

Have previous tenants complained of the noise?

Get someone you trust to be in your flat doing normal stuff, talking to themselves etc. while your in the lower flat listening.
IF they will not allow this then let them go whistle.

If they will not willing to cooperate with finding a solution, they don't really have a serious problem.
 
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Have previous tenants complained of the noise?

Get someone you trust to be in your flat doing normal stuff, talking to themselves etc. while your in the lower flat listening.
IF they will not allow this then let them go whistle. (but not too loudly)
Apparently all three different tenants have complained.
 
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My five year old is noisy but the comments about walking on laminate and myself laughing by myself aren't anything to do with this
 
They can hear me laugh

When you’re reading everyones’ hilarious replies to your posts on here presumably.

Seriously though, there are floor soundproofing solutions using exotic materials. See e.g. https://www.soundstop.co.uk/soundproofing_floors.php

Issues include how to cope with the change of floor level. But you need to understand how the sound is being carried. For example, do you and they have your windows open a lot? There is not much you can do about noise going out one window and in another.
 
I personally like listening to lots of noise- people having sex, arguing etc it breaks up my mundane boring life . I loved travelling around Asia and listening to the mopeds outside. But I'm aware not everyone's like me.
surely you could listen to mopeds here, and the other things in Asia - Walking Street, perhaps ?;)
 
Not much you can do about a flat that doesn't have good noise dampening. I have a flat which is mid 90s timber frame and you can feel the block shake when the door closes. People who live in flats cannot expect to live in silence. Nothing you've described constitutes a statutory nuisance. Curtains and canvases can also help absorb sound.
 
If they contact the council, what constitutes noise pollution? If they record my kid screaming at 7 30 am or whatever ? Can you get prosecuted?

This noise testing company want to charge £1000 to test everywhere and then write s report on recommendations. Well, who should pay for this? Who's liable?
 
If you started doing noisy DIY at midnight, or having regular parties in the wee hours, then they could complain. Walking about is normal round the clock, LoL is normal during normal waking hours.
 
My mate lives in a flat built within the last decade. He gets woken up by the guy downstairs snoring, and no they're not in the same bed! My mum lives in a high-rise and hears a very squeaky door open/close from the flat above. This can waken her up if the person upstairs gets up through the night. She (the lady living upstairs) is getting on in years and is quite deaf, so when she has her telly on it's pretty loud. To me, all these things fall into the bracket of 'noises you might hear from neighbours that you have to live with.' Then there are genuine anti-social noises like loud music, diy at 6am or 10pm etc. Of course, we all have a responsibility to take our neighbours into account when it comes to noise. Just using this as an example (not saying you do this) imagine if you let your son ride a plastic wheeled tricycle around the flat, over the laminate etc. You might think 'well we need to live so deal with it!' whereas to me, that falls into an anti-social noise for the neighbours downstairs as the noise over laminate would likely be very loud. Of course, much of this is subjective as well, which leads to the problems many face around this.

Only you know if the noises coming from your flat genuinely fall into the 'to be expected' or anti-social bracket. If they're in the former, your neighbours basically have to accept and expect it due to living in a joined (not detached) property.
 
My five year old is noisy but the comments about walking on laminate and myself laughing by myself aren't anything to do with this
Laminate is often a problem in flats and is often prohibited in the lease. A decent layer of underlay and carpet will reduce the noise a lot.
 
Laminate is often a problem in flats and is often prohibited in the lease. A decent layer of underlay and carpet will reduce the noise a lot.
I'm laying some new laminate soon and I bought noise reducing underlay.
 

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