ParkingEye is the UK's largest private parking operator, running ANPR camera systems at thousands of retail parks, hospitals, and motorway services. Their tickets look official — but they're issued by a private company, not the council, and have specific legal weaknesses that make them easier to beat than most people think.
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ParkingEye is a member of the BPA Approved Operator Scheme. All BPA members must follow the BPA Code of Practice, which sets minimum standards for signage, grace periods, and the appeal process. If ParkingEye rejects your informal appeal, you have 28 days to escalate to POPLA — the independent adjudicator for BPA members. POPLA costs nothing and its decisions are binding on the operator. A well-argued POPLA submission succeeds in around 40% of cases.
No — a private parking ticket is a civil contractual claim, not a statutory penalty. It has no criminal implications, cannot affect your driving licence, and requires a court process before any enforcement action can be taken.
You are not required to name the driver to a private company. As the registered keeper you can be pursued under POFA 2012, but only if the Notice to Keeper was correctly served within strict time limits.
You can escalate to the independent adjudicator at no cost — POPLA for BPA members, IAS for IPC members. A significant proportion of appeals succeed at this stage. You have 28 days from the rejection letter.
Only if the company files a County Court claim and you fail to respond. This is rare for well-appealed tickets. If you receive a court claim form, always respond within 14 days.