By the Pine AI Editorial Team | Updated May 2026 | Reviewed using publicly available legal resources
Every parking ticket issued on a San Francisco city street comes from one agency: the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency (SFMTA). Understanding how SFMTA's citation system operates — and what its quirks are — is the first step toward disputing effectively.
What Is SFMTA?
SFMTA is the city agency responsible for both San Francisco's transit system (Muni buses, light rail, cable cars) and its on-street parking enforcement. This dual role is significant: SFMTA's parking rules are shaped by transit priorities. Muni bus stops, bus-only lanes, and transit-adjacent tow-away zones exist specifically to keep Muni routes moving — and they're enforced accordingly.
SFMTA parking control officers patrol the city's streets. Citations are issued as physical notices placed on the vehicle and entered into SFMTA's citation management system. You can look up any citation at sfmta.com using the citation number from the notice.
How SFMTA's Citation System Works
When a parking control officer issues a citation, the following happens:
- The officer records the plate number, vehicle description, location, violation code, date, and time
- A printed citation is left on the vehicle
- The citation is entered into SFMTA's system — accessible at sfmta.com
- A payment deadline runs from the citation date
SFMTA citation numbers follow a standard format. If your citation is not appearing in the sfmta.com system, allow 24–48 hours after issuance — same-day lookups occasionally fail due to data entry lag.
Accessing sfmta.com for Disputes and Payments
The SFMTA parking citations portal is at sfmta.com/getting-around/drive-park/parking-citations.
From this portal you can:
- Look up a citation by number or plate
- Pay a citation online
- Request an initial administrative review (dispute)
- Check the status of an existing dispute
To request a review online, you need your citation number and vehicle information. The portal allows you to upload photographs and submit a written explanation. Keep your screen confirmation number — SFMTA's system does not always send confirmation emails.
For mail submissions, the address is printed on the back of the citation notice. Mail submissions should be sent with a tracking method — SFMTA's mail processing can be slow.
SFMTA-Specific Quirks to Know
Muni Zones and Bus Stop Boundaries
SFMTA's Muni bus stops are marked with yellow curb paint and "No Parking" signs. The challenge: Muni route changes can alter bus stop locations, and physical signs or curb markings don't always update immediately. If you received a citation for parking in what appeared to be an unmarked zone, check whether there was a recent Muni route change affecting that stop's position.
Bus-Only Lanes
Several San Francisco streets have dedicated bus-only lanes, particularly on Market Street, Mission Street, and Geary Boulevard. Bus-only lane restrictions apply during specified hours and are enforced strictly. The lane boundary is marked with red paint and overhead signals in some areas — the restriction applies to all non-Muni vehicles during active hours, including taxis and rideshare vehicles.
SFpark Meter Policy
SFpark is SFMTA's smart meter system deployed across much of the city. SFpark meters use dynamic pricing — rates vary by block, time of day, and demand. Rates are adjusted periodically by SFMTA to target a target occupancy level.
Practical implications for drivers:
- The rate on a pay station may differ from what you recall from a previous visit
- Some SFpark meters have maximum time limits that vary by block
- SFpark pay stations accept credit cards, some accept coins; check the specific terminal
When a SFpark terminal fails — error message, unresponsive screen, card reader issue — photograph the condition immediately. This is a recognized dispute ground.
Tow-Away Zone Complexity
SF's tow-away zones are among the most complex in California. Many blocks have stacked sign clusters with multiple overlapping restrictions:
- Street cleaning hours (e.g., Tuesday 8–10am)
- Peak-period tow-away (e.g., weekdays 7–9am, 4–6pm)
- Muni-related restrictions
Reading every sign at a cluster before parking is essential — but sign obstruction and unclear posting are also genuine grounds for disputes when the restriction was not reasonably visible.
What Pine AI Does With SFMTA Citations
Pine recognizes SFMTA's citation format and violation codes. When you upload an SF citation, Pine:
- Identifies the specific violation type and applicable dispute grounds
- Checks whether signage clarity, officer error, or payment failure is the strongest ground
- Writes a dispute letter formatted for SFMTA's initial review process
- Files the submission through the sfmta.com portal on your behalf
If SFMTA's initial review denies the dispute and a formal hearing is needed, Pine prepares the hearing submission as well.
