What Motorists Get Wrong About the 14-Day Discount Period
The Discount Is Designed to Stop You From Checking
Every private parking charge notice offers a reduced rate if you pay within 14 days. Typically £60 instead of £100. This seems like a reasonable offer. But the 14-day discount is a deliberate strategy to prevent motorists from checking whether the ticket is actually valid.
Why Operators Want You to Pay Quickly
Speed prevents scrutiny. If you pay within 14 days, you are unlikely to:
- Check whether the NTK was served within the POFA 14-day deadline
- Photograph the signage at the location
- Review the ANPR evidence
- Seek advice or use a service like ours
Payment closes the case. Once you pay, you cannot appeal. The payment is treated as an admission that the charge was valid. Even if the ticket was issued incorrectly, your money is gone.
It is still profitable at the reduced rate. A £60 payment on a charge that cost the operator nothing to issue is pure profit. Operators would rather collect £60 quickly than risk losing the entire £100 on appeal.
What Most Motorists Do Not Know
Appealing freezes the discount period. If you submit an appeal within the 14-day window, the discounted rate is preserved while the appeal is being considered. You do not lose the discount by appealing.
This means you can check your ticket for defects, submit an appeal, and if the appeal fails, still pay the reduced rate.
70% of tickets we check have defects. Based on our data, the majority of parking charges contain at least one legal defect that could lead to cancellation. Paying the discount without checking means paying for something that might not be enforceable.
The 14-day clock starts from the date on the notice, not the date you receive it. If the notice was posted by second class mail and took 3 days to arrive, you may only have 11 days remaining. Some motorists pay in a rush because they think time is running out, when in reality the operator already consumed several days of their window through slow posting.
What You Should Do Instead
- Do not pay immediately. Take 5 minutes to check the ticket first.
- Upload your notice to our AI PCN Manager. The assessment takes under 3 minutes.
- If defects are found, appeal. The discount is preserved while the appeal is pending.
- If no defects are found, pay the reduced rate. You have lost nothing by checking first.
The Numbers
- A free check takes 3 minutes
- 70% of tickets have defects
- An appeal letter costs £9.99
- A successful appeal saves you £60-£100
The return on investment of checking before paying is significant.
Check Before You Pay
Upload your parking charge notice for a free assessment. If we find defects, appeal. If we do not, pay the discount. Either way, you make an informed decision.


