Government Scrutinizes Inflated Parking Ticket Fees Amidst Soaring Profits and Calls for Regulation

October 5, 2025
Government Scrutinizes Inflated Parking Ticket Fees Amidst Soaring Profits and Calls for Regulation
  • The government is reviewing the £70 cap on recovery fees, suggesting it may be higher than justified, and is seeking further evidence through consultation.

  • The MHCLG considers the high profits a sign of market imbalance and is exploring whether current fee caps are appropriate, seeking more evidence to justify them.

  • The British Parking Association disputes the government's profit calculations, claiming the figures are misleading and that the fees are intended as deterrents rather than profit sources.

  • The government aims to improve industry standards and transparency through a new private parking code of practice, with a review of fee caps, including the £70 recovery fee, currently under consideration.

  • Debt recovery agencies charging drivers up to £70 per parking ticket have faced scrutiny, especially since a planned ban on such fees was withdrawn after legal challenges from parking companies.

  • A government report reveals that these companies are making an average profit margin exceeding 60%, which the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) considers a market failure.

  • The government notes that if the current payment rates stay stable, debt recovery agencies would break even with fees of around £26 per ticket, indicating that current charges are inflated.

  • Industry critics, including the AA and RAC Foundation, argue that profit margins are disproportionately high, calling for stricter regulation and greater transparency in the sector.

  • The high profit margins, approximately 63%, are comparable to those of innovative companies, despite the sector providing basic services like payment plans, which suggests excessive market control.

  • The AA criticizes the 63% profit margin as excessively high for the services provided and advocates for regulation to ensure fairness, citing overzealous practices by some private parking operators.

  • A consultation is ongoing on the proposed code of practice, which seeks to regulate the sector better and increase transparency, including reviewing the fee cap.

  • The RAC Foundation links high profit margins to the increasing number of private parking firms buying vehicle keeper records from the DVLA, which has driven demand for debt recovery services.

  • Concerns have been raised that private parking operators rely heavily on debt recovery firms, sometimes transferring cases for minor charges, which contributes to the sector's high profitability.

  • Recent data shows a 24% increase in private parking tickets issued in the UK between April and June, totaling 4.3 million tickets, highlighting the sector's growth and profitability.

  • The government is working to enhance transparency and standards in the parking industry, with a forthcoming response on fee caps and regulations.

Summary based on 7 sources


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