Free Traffic Legal Advice

Live cases legal advice => Civil penalty charge notices (Councils, TFL and so on) => Topic started by: Rehmh05 on February 13, 2026, 09:03:10 pm

Title: Re: PCN Hillingdon- Parked on footpath
Post by: stamfordman on February 13, 2026, 11:03:56 pm
I would pay the discount - there is no chance of being let off this although no ask no get.

Note you also committed a yellow line contravention as you were in a controlled zone operational then.

(https://i.ibb.co/qLzRxSJT/Whats-App-Image-2026-02-13-at-8-39-38-PM.jpg)
Title: Re: PCN Hillingdon- Parked on footpath
Post by: Incandescent on February 13, 2026, 10:59:31 pm
Provided you submit your reps within the discount period, they normally will re-offer the discount. T
Title: Re: PCN Hillingdon- Parked on footpath
Post by: Rehmh05 on February 13, 2026, 10:54:40 pm
Thanks for the response. If I make that representation, do I loose the chance to pay the £70, or is it put on hold pending decision?

You've been whalloped by the London-wide ban on off-carriageway parking in force since the 70s and which needs no signs or lines. Such bans can be enforced elsewhere in the UK but signs are needed to advise of a local ban.

For all PCNs issued by councils and Transport for London under several Acts, the owner of the vehicle has responsibility for payment or appealing PCNs. Having said this, the owner can authorise another person to appeal on his behalf, but if the appeal is lost, responsibility for payment stays with the owner.

All you can really do is submit representations based on your being from Birmingham, and were not familiar with the London ban. Ask for PCN cancellation for this first time offence as a goodwill gesture.
Title: Re: PCN Hillingdon- Parked on footpath
Post by: Incandescent on February 13, 2026, 10:44:05 pm
You've been whalloped by the London-wide ban on off-carriageway parking in force since the 70s and which needs no signs or lines. Such bans can be enforced elsewhere in the UK but signs are needed to advise of a local ban.

For all PCNs issued by councils and Transport for London under several Acts, the owner of the vehicle has responsibility for payment or appealing PCNs. Having said this, the owner can authorise another person to appeal on his behalf, but if the appeal is lost, responsibility for payment stays with the owner.

All you can really do is submit representations based on your being from Birmingham, and were not familiar with the London ban. Ask for PCN cancellation for this first time offence as a goodwill gesture.
Title: PCN Hillingdon- Parked on footpath
Post by: Rehmh05 on February 13, 2026, 09:03:10 pm
Hi everyone,

Background: I’m based in Birmingham, where parking partly on the footpath is quite common on narrow residential roads and is often done as a courtesy to allow traffic to pass. I was driving a family member’s car while visiting Hillingdon.


I parked on St Stephen’s Road, which is fairly narrow, and positioned the car partly on the footway so that other vehicles could get through. The car was only there briefly. When I returned, I found a PCN on the windscreen. There were no parking signs on the road.


After doing some research, I now understand that parking on the footway is an offence that it is enforced much more strictly in london than in other parts of the country.


Is there any point / any grounds to contest this?
If there are grounds to contest; is it contested on my name or the owner (family member's name)

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