Smart Parking PCN
14 Day Rule Smart Parking: Late Postal PCN Notice Guide
Received a Smart Parking postal PCN late? Check the event date, issue date, delivery timing, and POFA keeper-liability wording before you pay or appeal.
Check My PCN FreeSmart Parking deadline guide
Check whether Smart Parking served the postal PCN late
Received a Smart Parking postal PCN late? Check the event date, issue date, delivery timing, and POFA keeper-liability wording before you pay or appeal.
Check My PCN Free →No windscreen ticket
If there was no yellow ticket left on your windscreen, the 14-day postal window becomes the key date check.
Late postal PCN
The checker compares the parking event date against the date the Smart Parking letter was issued and received.
Keeper liability check
If the parking charge ticket is late, the appeal can focus on why keeper liability may not apply to the registered keeper.
14-day evidence check
A late postal notice is a keeper-liability problem, not just a complaint.
If no windscreen ticket was served, the postal notice timing matters because Smart Parking must rely on the notice paperwork to pursue the registered keeper. The checker should compare the parking event, notice issue date, delivery timing, and the exact POFA wording before the appeal is drafted.
Before you appeal, collect this
- Event date and notice issue date
- Whether a windscreen ticket was issued
- Keeper wording on the back of the parking charge notice
Postal notice timing
Check the event date, issue date, delivery date, and POFA wording together.
The 14-day point is not a magic phrase. It matters when Smart Parking is trying to pursue the registered keeper after a postal ANPR notice, and the appeal needs the dates and wording in the right order.
Who this helps
Drivers or keepers who received a Smart Parking notice in the post and did not get a windscreen ticket first.
When to act
Act as soon as the letter arrives. Private parking notices normally carry tight appeal and payment windows, and the Smart Parking portal requires the PCN reference and VRM before a charge can be managed.
What to upload
- Front and back of the parking charge notice
- Envelope or delivery proof if the letter arrived late
- Any evidence showing no windscreen ticket was served
- Photos or screenshots showing the event date and issue date
Why the free check helps
The checker reads the notice, identifies the stage, and turns the dates into an appeal point only where the facts support it.
Based on Smart Parking portal information and DfT guidance on POFA Schedule 4 keeper liability. Checked 5 June 2026.
Smart Parking Appeal Questions
14 Day Rule Smart Parking: Late Postal PCN Notice Guide
What dates matter for the Smart Parking 14-day rule?
Check the parking event date, the date the notice was issued, when it was delivered, and whether there was a windscreen ticket first. The argument is strongest where Smart Parking is relying on a postal notice to pursue the registered keeper.
Does a late Smart Parking letter always cancel the charge?
No. It can be a keeper-liability point, but the driver may still be alleged to owe the charge. The appeal should be drafted around the facts and avoid naming the driver unless there is a clear reason.
What should I upload for a late postal PCN?
Upload the full front and back of the notice, the envelope if useful, and anything showing when the letter actually arrived.
Next step
Use the free checker before you pay.
Upload the front and back of your Smart Parking parking charge ticket. The OCR checker reads the dates, registration, operator details, location, and evidence points before the assessment score is shown.
Do not pay Smart Parking just because the ticket looks official. Check the PCN, dates, signs, payment records, and evidence before deciding whether to pay or appeal. Once a charge is paid, the case is usually harder to reopen.
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