Last reviewed: May 2026
Quick answer: ParkingEye is a UK private parking operator. Appeal route: POPLA (BPA member). Appeal first to ParkingEye at parkingeye.co.uk; if rejected, escalate to the independent service (POPLA for BPA members, IAS for IPC members). Both are free.ParkingEye: One of the largest UK private parking operators. ANPR-based. Established by appeal route in ParkingEye v Beavis [2015] UKSC 67. Operator portal: parkingeye.co.uk. Independent appeal route: POPLA (BPA member).
Like all UK private parking operators bound by the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012 Schedule 4, ParkingEye relies on contract law: by parking, the driver is taken to have accepted the terms displayed on the signage. The Supreme Court confirmed this approach in ParkingEye v Beavis [2015] UKSC 67 provided the charge is not a disproportionate penalty.
How to appeal a ParkingEye parking charge
Step 1: appeal to ParkingEye through the operator portal (parkingeye.co.uk) within 28 days of the Notice to Driver (left on the vehicle) or the Notice to Keeper (posted to the registered keeper under POFA 2012 within 14 days of the parking event for the driver notice, or 35 days for the keeper notice if no driver notice was issued).
Step 2 (if the operator rejects): appeal free of charge to POPLA (BPA member) within 28 days of the operator's rejection. POPLA decisions are binding on the operator but not on the motorist - you can still defend in court if pursued.
Common grounds for appeal
Inadequate signage: the British Parking Association and IPC codes of practice set minimum signage standards (size, positioning, visibility, lighting). Photographic evidence of inadequate signs is often decisive.
Procedural defects in the Notice to Keeper: POFA 2012 sets strict requirements for the timing, content and method of service. Failure to comply with POFA defeats keeper liability and leaves the operator to identify the actual driver.
No contract: where the operator has no land owner authority, no contract is formed; the parking charge is unenforceable. Lack of genuine landowner agreement is a common ground.
Disproportionate charge: a charge significantly above the £100 typical figure may be challengeable as a penalty, though ParkingEye v Beavis upheld £85 as commercially justified.
What happens if you do not pay or appeal
ParkingEye or their debt recovery agents (often BW Legal or Gladstones Solicitors) issue a Letter Before Action giving 30 days to pay or respond, then a County Court claim form. Ignoring the claim form results in a default judgment.
Always respond to a County Court claim form. Defended claims are decided by a District Judge; undefended claims are decided automatically against you. Many private parking claims are won by defendants on POFA technicalities or evidence issues.
A County Court Judgment (CCJ) goes on your credit file for 6 years (unless paid within 30 days of judgment). Free defence guidance is on the Money Saving Expert forum and from Citizens Advice.
The early payment discount window
ParkingEye normally offers a discount (often 40 per cent off, sometimes 50 per cent) for payment within 14 days. The discount is normally lost if you appeal and the appeal is unsuccessful. The decision is: pay early and lose the chance to appeal, or appeal and accept the risk of the full charge if you lose.
Some operators preserve the discount for a further period after a rejected formal appeal; check the specific notice for the discount terms.
If you intend to dispute, do not pay first; payment is normally treated as accepting liability and undermines a subsequent appeal.
When the case looks weak: cut losses or fight on
If the signage was clear, the Notice to Keeper complied with POFA 2012, and there is no contract defect, the case is hard to win at POPLA or in court. Pay early to take the discount.
If signage was inadequate or POFA was breached, the case is often winnable at POPLA. Free draft appeal templates and guides are on the Money Saving Expert "Private parking tickets" forum.
For complex cases, regulated solicitors can advise on the merits and (for higher-value claims) defend in court. The Civil Procedure Rules govern the County Court process.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between a council PCN and a private parking charge?
A council PCN is a statutory penalty under the Traffic Management Act 2004 issued by a local authority. A private parking charge is a contract claim under POFA 2012 Schedule 4 issued by a private operator. The appeal routes and enforcement processes are entirely different.
Will an unpaid parking fine affect my credit file?
Council PCNs do not appear on credit files (enforced through the Traffic Enforcement Centre, not the County Court). Private parking charges can result in a CCJ if the operator pursues you in court and you do not respond - a CCJ stays on your credit file for 6 years.
Can I be jailed for not paying a parking fine?
No. Both council PCNs and private parking charges are civil debts, not criminal offences. Persistent non-payment leads to enforcement agents (council PCNs) or County Court judgments (private charges), not imprisonment.
Where can I get free advice on parking fines?
Citizens Advice provides free independent advice. The Money Saving Expert "Reclaim Parking Fines" forum has comprehensive free guides and draft appeal templates.
What is POPLA?
POPLA (Parking on Private Land Appeals) is the independent appeals service for parking charges issued by British Parking Association (BPA) member operators. POPLA appeals are free and decisions are binding on the operator.
How We Verified This
Parking fine framework verified against the Traffic Management Act 2004, the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012 Schedule 4, the Traffic Signs Regulations and General Directions 2016, ParkingEye v Beavis [2015] UKSC 67, and the British Parking Association and International Parking Community codes of practice.