It is 7 AM on a Saturday and the construction noise starts again. Jackhammers, dump trucks, power saws — all before the legally allowed hours. You have asked the workers to stop. They ignore you. Here is how to actually make it stop.
Know Your Local Noise Ordinance
Every city and county has noise regulations. Common rules include:
- Weekday construction: Typically allowed 7 AM to 6 PM or 8 AM to 5 PM
- Saturday construction: Often 8 AM or 9 AM start, ending by 5 PM
- Sunday and holidays: Many jurisdictions prohibit construction noise entirely
- Maximum decibel levels may apply at the property line
Check your city's municipal code or call your local code enforcement office.
Step 1: Document the Violation
Before filing a complaint:
- Record the noise — video with visible timestamps is best
- Note the exact times — when it starts and when it stops
- Record dates — build a pattern of violations
- Measure if possible — free decibel meter apps give approximate readings
- Identify the source — which company and what property
Step 2: File a Complaint
Depending on your jurisdiction:
- Call 311 — most cities route noise complaints through 311
- Call the police non-emergency line — for immediate violations in progress
- Contact code enforcement — for ongoing violations and construction permits
- File online — many cities have online complaint portals
When filing, provide: the address, the company name (if visible on trucks or signage), specific times, and your documentation.
Step 3: Escalate If Violations Continue
If complaints do not work:
- Contact the construction company directly — sometimes they do not realize they are violating hours
- Contact the property owner — they may not know about the contractor's behavior
- File with the building department — violations can result in permit holds
- Contact your city council representative — constituent pressure gets results
- Consult a lawyer about nuisance claims if the problem is severe and ongoing
Quick Checklist
- [ ] Look up your local noise ordinance for allowed construction hours
- [ ] Document violations with video, timestamps, and dates
- [ ] Call 311 or the police non-emergency line to file complaints
- [ ] Identify the construction company and property owner
- [ ] Contact code enforcement for permit-related action
- [ ] Escalate to your city council representative if unresolved
Bottom Line
Construction noise violations are enforceable — you just need to file the right complaints with the right agencies. Document the pattern, report through official channels, and escalate if the violations continue.
If spending your morning on the phone with code enforcement and 311 is not how you want to start your day, an AI assistant can file the complaints, contact the construction company, and follow up with the building department for you.







