The penalty has increased by 50%. Upload your charge certificate and Parking Mate AI checks whether you still have options to challenge.

Act now to challenge your Weymouth and Portland charge certificate before the 14-day deadline passes. The penalty has increased by 50% and Weymouth and Portland can register the debt for court enforcement. You may still have options, including a statutory declaration if you did not receive earlier notices. Parking Mate AI analyses your case and advises on the best route forward.
A charge certificate from Weymouth and Portland is issued after a penalty charge notice has passed through the notice to owner stage without being paid or successfully challenged. It increases the original penalty by 50%.
Once Weymouth and Portland issues a charge certificate, you have 14 days to pay the increased amount. If you do not pay, the council can apply to register the debt at the Traffic Enforcement Centre. This can lead to an order for recovery and ultimately bailiff enforcement.
However, you may still be able to challenge. If you did not receive the original PCN, notice to owner, or charge certificate, you can file a statutory declaration at the Traffic Enforcement Centre. This sworn statement, if accepted, reopens the case and restores your earlier appeal rights.
Parking Mate AI analyses both your original Weymouth and Portland PCN and the charge certificate to identify defects, check service timelines, and determine whether a statutory declaration or other challenge route is available.
If you did not receive the original Weymouth and Portland PCN or notice to owner, the charge certificate may be challengeable through a statutory declaration.
Weymouth and Portland must send the charge certificate to the correct address. Service to the wrong address or after an unreasonable delay can be grounds for challenge.
A Weymouth and Portland charge certificate must not be issued until the required waiting period after the notice to owner has expired. Early issue is a procedural defect.
Defects in the original Weymouth and Portland penalty charge notice, such as signage failures or incorrect contravention codes, remain relevant even at the charge certificate stage.
If you made representations to Weymouth and Portland that were not properly considered before the charge certificate was issued, this can be grounds for a statutory declaration.
A copy of the charge certificate from Weymouth and Portland
Copies of the original Weymouth and Portland PCN and notice to owner (if received)
Proof of address if Weymouth and Portland sent notices to an incorrect address
Any correspondence with Weymouth and Portland including representations and rejection letters
Evidence that you did not receive earlier notices (for example, proof of a change of address)
Any documents supporting defects in the original Weymouth and Portland penalty charge notice
Learn how to appeal a penalty charge notice from Weymouth and Portland.
Learn how to challenge an order for recovery from Weymouth and Portland.
Learn how to respond to a notice of enforcement from Weymouth and Portland.
Learn how to deal with bailiff enforcement for a parking debt from Weymouth and Portland.
Learn how to appeal a bus lane penalty charge notice from Weymouth and Portland.
Learn how to appeal a moving traffic penalty charge notice from Weymouth and Portland.
Learn how to appeal a restricted street penalty charge notice from Weymouth and Portland.
Learn how to appeal a paid parking penalty charge notice from Weymouth and Portland.
Learn how to appeal a permit parking penalty charge notice from Weymouth and Portland.
Learn how to appeal an off-street parking penalty charge notice from Weymouth and Portland.
Common questions about Weymouth and Portland charge certificate appeals and how Parking Mate AI can help.
A Weymouth and Portland charge certificate is issued by Weymouth and Portland after a penalty charge notice has gone through the notice to owner stage without being paid or successfully challenged. It increases the original penalty by 50% and starts a 14-day countdown before the council can register the debt for court enforcement.
To challenge a Weymouth and Portland charge certificate, you can file a statutory declaration at the Traffic Enforcement Centre within 21 days if you have valid grounds, such as never having received the original PCN or notice to owner. Parking Mate AI identifies whether you qualify for a statutory declaration based on your circumstances.
You have 14 days from the date of a Weymouth and Portland charge certificate to pay the increased amount before Weymouth and Portland can apply to register the debt at the Traffic Enforcement Centre. If you believe you have grounds for a statutory declaration, you should act within this window.
Your standard Weymouth and Portland charge certificate appeal options are limited at this stage. However, if you did not receive the original PCN or notice to owner, you may be able to file a statutory declaration that reopens the case. Parking Mate AI checks whether your circumstances qualify for this route.
A Weymouth and Portland charge certificate increases the original penalty by 50%. For a higher-band contravention, this means the charge rises from £130 to £195. For a lower-band contravention, it rises from £65 to £97.50. The increased amount must be paid within 14 days unless you have grounds to challenge.
A statutory declaration is a sworn statement filed at the Traffic Enforcement Centre. For a Weymouth and Portland charge certificate, you can use it to declare that you did not receive the penalty charge notice, notice to owner, or charge certificate, or that you made representations that were not considered. If accepted, it reopens the case.
If you do not pay or challenge a Weymouth and Portland charge certificate within 14 days, Weymouth and Portland can register the debt at the Traffic Enforcement Centre. This leads to an order for recovery, and if you still do not respond, bailiff enforcement. Each stage has its own response options and deadlines.
Yes. Parking Mate AI analyses your original Weymouth and Portland PCN and the charge certificate to identify defects and advise on your options. If you qualify for a statutory declaration, the service can help prepare the paperwork. Even at the charge certificate stage, procedural errors in the original notice may still be relevant.
Weymouth and Portland must follow strict rules when issuing a charge certificate. It must be sent to the correct address, after the correct waiting period, and must contain specific information. If any of these requirements were not met, your Weymouth and Portland charge certificate appeal may have additional grounds.
It is rarely too late. Even after a Weymouth and Portland charge certificate, you may be able to file a statutory declaration, challenge the registration at the Traffic Enforcement Centre, or raise defences if the matter proceeds to bailiff stage. Parking Mate AI checks your options at every stage of the process.
Upload your notice from Weymouth and Portland for a free Parking Mate AI defect check. If grounds are found, get a professional charge certificate appeal letter ready to send.
