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Fake Parking Ticket UK: How to Spot One and What to Do (2026)

Received a suspicious parking ticket in the UK? How to tell if it's a fake, a scam, or an unenforceable private notice — and what to do about it.

By the Pine AI Editorial Team | Updated May 2026 | Reviewed using publicly available legal resources

"Fake parking ticket" in the UK usually means one of two different things — and the action you take depends on which one you've received.


Type 1: Actual Scam (Fraudulent Notice)

Rare but real. A notice placed on your windscreen that looks official but directs payment to a personal bank account, a suspicious website, or a phone number not associated with any legitimate operator.

How to spot it:

  • Payment is demanded to a personal account (sort code / account number format rather than a company)
  • The website URL is unusual or doesn't match a known operator
  • The notice has no BPA or IPC accreditation logo
  • There's no appeal process mentioned
  • The language is aggressive or threatening in an unusual way

What to do:

  • Do not pay
  • Report to Action Fraud (UK's national fraud reporting centre)
  • Photograph the notice and the location

Legitimate parking operators — even aggressive ones — will always have a named company, a BPA or IPC membership reference, and a POPLA or IAS appeal route.


Type 2: Unenforceable Private Notice (Legally Issued But Flawed)

More common. A notice issued by a real private operator (APCOA, NCP, etc.) on private land — but one that contains errors or procedural defects that make it legally unenforceable.

Common reasons a private notice is effectively unenforceable:

  • The Notice to Keeper was not issued within the statutory PoFA 2012 window (typically 14–56 days after the event)
  • The Notice to Keeper doesn't contain all required statutory information
  • The signs in the car park were inadequate under the BPA Code of Practice
  • DVLA keeper data was accessed without proper authorisation
  • The operator is not a BPA or IPC member (cannot access DVLA keeper data)

Unenforceable notices look real — they're issued by real companies. The enforceability issue is in the procedural detail.

What to do:

  • Do not ignore — ignoring can still result in County Court proceedings
  • Challenge the notice (see how to dispute a UK parking ticket →)
  • Cite the specific PoFA or BPA code defect in your challenge

How to Check If a Notice Is Legitimate

  1. Look up the operator — does the company have a website? Are they listed as a BPA or IPC member?
  2. Check for a POPLA or IAS reference — if rejected, a legitimate BPA member must provide a POPLA reference
  3. Verify the DVLA access — legitimate operators must be authorised to request keeper data from the DVLA. An operator with no BPA/IPC membership cannot legally access this data.

What If I Already Paid a Fraudulent Notice?

Contact your bank immediately to report the fraud and request a chargeback. Report to Action Fraud. The police may advise further steps.



Sources

Back to parent sectionUK Parking Ticket Help: Dispute, Appeal, and Pay (2026 Guide)How to dispute or pay a UK parking ticket. Council PCNs, private parking notices, APCOA, POPLA appeals, London boroughs, and Pine AI automated filing.

Related links

More parking ticket resources