Cheshire West and Chester has registered the debt at the Traffic Enforcement Centre. This is not a CCJ and does not affect your credit record. Upload your documents and Parking Mate AI checks your challenge routes.

An order for recovery from Cheshire West and Chester means Cheshire West and Chester has registered the unpaid charge certificate debt at the Traffic Enforcement Centre (TEC). This is not a county court judgement and does not appear on your credit record. You can challenge it by filing a statutory declaration (TE9) if you did not receive earlier notices, or a witness statement (TE7) if there are other valid grounds. For parking contraventions you have 21 days; for moving traffic contraventions you have 36 days. Parking Mate AI identifies which route applies and prepares the paperwork.
An order for recovery is issued after Cheshire West and Chester registers an unpaid charge certificate debt at the Traffic Enforcement Centre (TEC). It is the stage between the charge certificate and bailiff enforcement.
Crucially, an order for recovery is not a county court judgement. It does not appear on your credit record. It is a debt registered under the Traffic Management Act 2004 through the TEC, which is a separate process from the county court system.
You can challenge an order for recovery by filing a TE9 statutory declaration (if you did not receive the PCN, notice to owner, or charge certificate) or a TE7 witness statement (if there are other grounds such as procedural errors in the original notice). If accepted, the order is revoked and the case reopens at an earlier stage.
Parking Mate AI analyses the original Cheshire West and Chester PCN, checks the enforcement timeline, and identifies whether you qualify for a TE9 or TE7. If grounds exist, the service prepares the necessary documents for filing at the Traffic Enforcement Centre.
If you did not receive the Cheshire West and Chester PCN, notice to owner, or charge certificate, you may qualify for a TE9 statutory declaration that revokes the order and reopens the case.
Defects in the original Cheshire West and Chester penalty charge notice, such as signage failures, incorrect contravention codes, or service timeline errors, remain relevant at the order for recovery stage.
Cheshire West and Chester must follow strict procedures when registering a debt at the Traffic Enforcement Centre. Errors in the registration process can form the basis of a TE7 witness statement.
If you made representations to Cheshire West and Chester that were not properly considered before the debt was registered, this can support a TE7 challenge.
If Cheshire West and Chester sent enforcement notices to the wrong address, you may not have had a fair opportunity to respond at earlier stages. This supports a TE9 statutory declaration.
A copy of the order for recovery from Cheshire West and Chester
Copies of the original Cheshire West and Chester PCN, notice to owner, and charge certificate (if received)
Proof of address if Cheshire West and Chester sent notices to an incorrect address
Any correspondence with Cheshire West and Chester about the penalty
Evidence of defects in the original Cheshire West and Chester PCN (photographs, signage, etc.)
Proof of a change of address if applicable (utility bills, tenancy agreement)
Learn how to appeal a penalty charge notice from Cheshire West and Chester.
Learn how to challenge a charge certificate from Cheshire West and Chester.
Learn how to respond to a notice of enforcement from Cheshire West and Chester.
Learn how to deal with bailiff enforcement for a parking debt from Cheshire West and Chester.
Learn how to appeal a bus lane penalty charge notice from Cheshire West and Chester.
Learn how to appeal a moving traffic penalty charge notice from Cheshire West and Chester.
Learn how to appeal a restricted street penalty charge notice from Cheshire West and Chester.
Learn how to appeal a paid parking penalty charge notice from Cheshire West and Chester.
Learn how to appeal a permit parking penalty charge notice from Cheshire West and Chester.
Learn how to appeal an off-street parking penalty charge notice from Cheshire West and Chester.
Common questions about Cheshire West and Chester order for recoverys and how Parking Mate AI can help.
An order for recovery is a court-registered debt notice issued after Cheshire West and Chester registers an unpaid charge certificate at the Traffic Enforcement Centre (TEC). It is not a county court judgement and does not appear on your credit record. It authorises the council to use bailiff enforcement if you do not respond within the deadline.
You can challenge a Cheshire West and Chester order for recovery by filing a statutory declaration (TE9) or a witness statement (TE7) at the Traffic Enforcement Centre. A TE9 is used if you did not receive earlier notices. A TE7 is used if there are other valid grounds. Parking Mate AI identifies which route applies to your case.
For a parking contravention, you have 21 days from the date of a Cheshire West and Chester order for recovery to file a statutory declaration (TE9) or witness statement (TE7) at the Traffic Enforcement Centre. For a moving traffic contravention, the deadline is 36 days. Missing these deadlines severely limits your options.
No. A Cheshire West and Chester order for recovery is registered at the Traffic Enforcement Centre, not at a county court. It is not a CCJ and does not appear on your credit record. However, if you do not respond, Cheshire West and Chester can instruct bailiffs to collect the debt.
A TE9 is a statutory declaration filed at the Traffic Enforcement Centre. You can use it to challenge a Cheshire West and Chester order for recovery if you did not receive the penalty charge notice, notice to owner, or charge certificate. If accepted, it revokes the order and reopens the case at an earlier stage.
A TE7 is a witness statement filed at the Traffic Enforcement Centre. It allows you to challenge a Cheshire West and Chester order for recovery on grounds other than non-receipt, such as procedural errors in the original PCN. If accepted by the adjudicator, the order is revoked and the case reopens.
If you do not respond to a Cheshire West and Chester order for recovery within the deadline, Cheshire West and Chester can instruct enforcement agents (bailiffs) to collect the debt plus their own fees. It is important to act within the deadline to preserve your challenge options.
Yes. Parking Mate AI analyses your Cheshire West and Chester order for recovery, checks for defects in the underlying PCN, and identifies whether you qualify for a TE9 statutory declaration or TE7 witness statement. If grounds exist, the service prepares the paperwork for filing at the Traffic Enforcement Centre.
No. A Cheshire West and Chester order for recovery is a debt registered at the Traffic Enforcement Centre under the Traffic Management Act 2004. It is completely separate from the county court system. It does not create a CCJ and does not affect your credit record. The challenge routes (TE9 and TE7) are specific to the TEC process.
Yes, indirectly. If you file a successful TE9 or TE7 in response to a Cheshire West and Chester order for recovery, the case reopens at an earlier stage and you regain your right to make formal representations or appeal to Traffic Penalty Tribunal. Defects in the original PCN remain relevant throughout the process.
Upload your notice from Cheshire West and Chester for a free Parking Mate AI defect check. If grounds are found, get a professional order for recovery letter ready to send.
