PSP tickets must follow strict rules on signage, timing, and wording. Upload yours and get a professional appeal letter ready to send to PSP or POPLA.

Appeal your PSP parking ticket with a professional letter targeting the specific defects on your notice. Parking Mate AI checks signage, timing, and procedure.
Appealing a PSP parking ticket is your right. A PSP parking charge is a contractual claim, not a criminal fine, and you are entitled to challenge it.
PSP must follow the BPA code of practice and the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012. A missing sign, a late notice, or an incorrect charge amount can each be enough to get the ticket cancelled.
Upload your PSP notice and let Parking Mate AI check it. If defects are found, you will receive a professional appeal letter ready to send to PSP or to POPLA.
The signs at the PSP car park and the wording on your notice must meet specific BPA code standards. Missing or unclear signs are one of the most common defects.
PSP must serve a notice to keeper within 14 days. A late notice can mean the registered keeper is not liable for the charge.
PSP must follow a set process when pursuing a charge. Skipped steps or incorrect procedures weaken their position.
PSP must hold and present proper evidence. Missing ANPR images, logs, or records can undermine the charge.
A photo or copy of the PSP parking charge notice appeal
Any earlier notices, reminders, or letters from PSP
Photographs of the car park signage if available
A note of the key dates
Any correspondence with PSP or POPLA
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Return to the main PSP help page for an overview of all available support.
Common questions about parking ticket appeals and how Parking Mate AI works.
A PSP parking charge notice appeal is a formal challenge to a parking charge issued by PSP. You have the right to appeal if you believe the ticket was issued incorrectly, the signage was inadequate, or PSP failed to follow proper procedure.
You normally have 28 days from the date of the PSP notice to submit your appeal. If PSP rejects it, you then have 28 days to escalate to POPLA. Acting quickly keeps all your options open.
Yes. You have the right to appeal a PSP parking charge notice appeal. A well-structured appeal citing specific defects is far more effective than a generic complaint. Parking Mate AI helps you identify those defects.
Parking Mate AI checks your PSP parking charge notice appeal for signage adequacy, POFA 14-day notice to keeper compliance, and charge amounts against the BPA code of practice cap. It also checks for required information on the notice and whether PSP followed the correct procedure. The specific checks depend on the notice stage.
Not until you have checked whether the PSP parking charge notice appeal is valid. Many PSP tickets contain defects in signage, timing, wording, or procedure. Checking before you pay costs nothing and may save you the full charge.
Keep the PSP parking charge notice appeal itself, all earlier notices and letters, and any photographs of the car park signage. Also save screenshots of correspondence with PSP and a written note of key dates. The more evidence you preserve early on, the stronger your position if the case escalates.
Under the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012, PSP must serve a notice to keeper within 14 days of the parking event or of obtaining keeper details from the DVLA. If PSP missed this deadline, the parking charge notice appeal may only be enforceable against the driver, not the registered keeper. This is one of the most common defects and one of the most effective grounds for challenge.
If you do not submit your PSP appeal before the deadline, you lose the right to a free independent review through POPLA. PSP may then pursue the charge through debt collectors and eventually the courts.
Each operator has its own patterns of enforcement and common defects. PSP is a BPA member, and commonly operates at private car parks and commercial sites. Parking Mate AI applies PSP-specific checks so the defect report is tailored to how PSP operates.
Upload a photo of your PSP parking charge notice appeal and Parking Mate AI reads the details automatically. It checks against BPA code requirements, POFA timing rules, signage standards, and procedural obligations specific to PSP. If defects are found, you can get a professional appeal letter targeting the specific issues on your PSP notice.
Upload your notice for a free Parking Mate AI defect check. Most results are ready in minutes, and if grounds are found you can get a professional appeal letter straight away.
