Runnymede Order for Recovery | TEC Response
Respond to Your Runnymede Order for Recovery
An Runnymede Order for Recovery means Runnymede has registered the unpaid penalty at the Traffic Enforcement Centre. It is not a CCJ, but you must act quickly because the next stage can lead to bailiff enforcement.
Start Runnymede Order for Recovery Response
Runnymede Order for Recovery Process
If you have received an Runnymede Order for Recovery, do not ignore it. You normally have a short deadline to file the correct witness statement or statutory declaration route where a valid ground applies.
Parking Mate UK checks the enforcement chain, identifies the correct TEC response ground, and prepares the response pack so you can act before the case moves to bailiff enforcement.
Appeal steps
- Check Deadline and Collect Evidence
- Runnymede Order for Recovery Grounds
- Prepare TEC Response Pack
- Submit Response to the Traffic Enforcement Centre
- TEC Decision and Reset
- Order for Recovery Outcome
- Runnymede Order for Recovery FAQ
Recent cancelled charges
Proof examples from private parking appeals.
Smart ParkingCancelledSmart Parking portal showed the balance cleared.
ParkingEyeCancelledParkingEye charge cancelled after appeal.
Horizon ParkingCancelledHorizon Parking charge cancelled after appeal.
Smart ParkingCancelledSmart Parking portal showed the balance cleared.
ParkingEyeCancelledParkingEye charge cancelled after appeal.
Horizon ParkingCancelledHorizon Parking charge cancelled after appeal.
An Order for Recovery is issued after a Charge Certificate remains unpaid and Runnymede registers the debt with the Traffic Enforcement Centre.
This is the statutory reset stage. The key is to check which earlier notice was missed, whether representations were made but not answered, whether the case was already with the tribunal, or whether the penalty was paid before registration.
1. Check Deadline and Collect Evidence
Start by checking the date on the Order for Recovery, the PCN number, vehicle registration, amount due, and the response deadline.
Then collect the full enforcement chain so Parking Mate UK can identify whether Runnymede registered the debt correctly and which TEC route applies.
- Order for Recovery: Keep the full Order for Recovery, including the TE3 or equivalent form, deadline, PCN number, vehicle registration, amount, and address used.
- Earlier notices: Find the PCN, Notice to Owner or postal PCN, Charge Certificate, Notice of Rejection, tribunal correspondence, and any envelopes.
- Proof of what happened: Keep proof that notices were not received, representations were submitted, an appeal was lodged, or payment was made.
- Address evidence: Keep V5C update proof, council tax bills, tenancy documents, completion statements, mail redirection records, or utility bills where service is an issue.
2. Runnymede Order for Recovery Grounds
The strongest Order for Recovery responses are usually based on missing statutory notices, unanswered formal representations, live tribunal appeals, payment before registration, wrong-address service, or factual errors in the registered debt.
Select the issue that best matches your Order for Recovery. We show what to check, what evidence to collect, and how it supports the TEC response.
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Select the issue that best matches your PCN. We show what to check, what evidence to collect, and how to frame the appeal.
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I did not receive the Notice to Owner or postal PCN
Did the Order for Recovery arrive even though you never received the earlier Notice to Owner or postal PCN?
This is one of the strongest Order for Recovery reset grounds. If the earlier statutory notice was not received, the case may be reset to an earlier stage.
What to check
- Whether the Order for Recovery says an earlier Notice to Owner or postal PCN was issued
- The address used on the Order for Recovery
- Whether your V5C keeper address was correct at the relevant time
- Whether you moved, had postal issues, or never had a fair chance to respond
Evidence to collect
- Order for Recovery
- Proof of current and previous address
- V5C update evidence where relevant
- Any council notices actually received
Appeal wording angle
Explain that the earlier statutory notice from Runnymede was not received, so the case should be reset to the correct stage instead of moving to bailiff enforcement.
Mistakes to avoid
- Ignoring the 21-day Order for Recovery deadline
- Sending a normal appeal instead of using the TEC route
- Failing to keep proof of address and non-receipt evidence
Related grounds
The Order for Recovery or earlier notices went to the wrong address
I made representations but did not receive a rejection
Did you challenge the PCN or Notice to Owner but never receive a Notice of Rejection?
If formal representations were made but no rejection was received, the Order for Recovery may be capable of being reset.
What to check
- Date formal representations were submitted
- Whether the council portal or email confirmed receipt
- Whether a Notice of Rejection was ever served
- Whether the Order for Recovery was issued while the case was still unanswered
Evidence to collect
- Copy of the formal representations
- Portal screenshot or email confirmation
- Order for Recovery
- Any council correspondence received after the representations
Appeal wording angle
State that representations were made to Runnymede and no Notice of Rejection was received before the debt was registered.
Mistakes to avoid
- Only saying you appealed without attaching proof
- Confusing an informal challenge with formal representations
- Missing the TEC deadline while waiting for the council to reply
Related grounds
I did not receive the Notice to Owner or postal PCN
I appealed to the tribunal but received no decision
Did you appeal to the tribunal but receive an Order for Recovery before getting a decision?
If a tribunal appeal was lodged and no decision was received, the debt registration may be premature or incorrect.
What to check
- Whether a tribunal appeal was submitted
- Tribunal case reference
- Whether a decision notice was issued
- Whether the council registered the debt before the tribunal process ended
Evidence to collect
- Tribunal appeal confirmation
- Tribunal case reference
- Order for Recovery
- Emails or screenshots from the tribunal portal
Appeal wording angle
Show that the case had already been escalated to the independent tribunal and should not have moved to debt registration before the appeal was decided.
Mistakes to avoid
- Not saving tribunal confirmation emails
- Assuming the council can continue enforcement while the tribunal appeal is live
- Missing the Order for Recovery deadline
Related grounds
I made representations but did not receive a rejection
The PCN was paid before the Order for Recovery
Was the penalty paid before the Order for Recovery was issued?
If the penalty was paid in time or before the debt was registered, the council may have registered the debt incorrectly.
What to check
- Payment date and amount
- Whether payment was accepted by the council portal
- Whether the payment covered the correct PCN
- Whether the council later issued the Order for Recovery despite payment
Evidence to collect
- Payment receipt
- Bank or card statement
- Council payment confirmation
- Order for Recovery
Appeal wording angle
State that payment was made before Runnymede registered the debt and require the council to reconcile the payment record.
Mistakes to avoid
- Not checking whether payment was for the correct PCN
- Only providing a bank statement without the council reference
- Ignoring the Order for Recovery because payment was already made
Related grounds
The Order for Recovery has wrong PCN or vehicle details
The Order for Recovery or earlier notices went to the wrong address
Were the notices sent to an old or incorrect address?
Wrong-address service can support a reset where you were denied the opportunity to respond at the correct stage.
What to check
- Address on the Order for Recovery
- Address on earlier notices if you have them
- Date you moved
- Date your V5C was updated
Evidence to collect
- Tenancy agreement, completion statement, council tax bill, or utility bill
- V5C update evidence
- Royal Mail redirection evidence
- All notices and envelopes received
Appeal wording angle
Explain why the documents from Runnymede were not served at an address where you could properly respond.
Mistakes to avoid
- Assuming a change of address is enough without proof
- Missing the in-time TEC deadline
- Using the wrong form for the notice type
Related grounds
I did not receive the Notice to Owner or postal PCN
The Order for Recovery has wrong PCN or vehicle details
Are the PCN number, vehicle registration, amount, or dates wrong?
Incorrect details can indicate that the wrong case has been registered or the enforcement chain needs to be checked carefully.
What to check
- PCN number
- Vehicle registration
- Penalty amount
- Dates on the Order for Recovery and earlier notices
Evidence to collect
- Order for Recovery
- Original PCN or earlier notice
- V5C or vehicle evidence
- Payment or appeal reference if relevant
Appeal wording angle
Ask Runnymede to prove the registered debt matches the correct PCN, vehicle, amount, and statutory enforcement chain.
Mistakes to avoid
- Ignoring small factual errors that may matter
- Not comparing the Order for Recovery against earlier documents
- Letting the case move to bailiff enforcement before checking the details
Related grounds
The PCN was paid before the Order for Recovery
3. Prepare TEC Response Pack
Parking Mate UK prepares a Runnymede Order for Recovery response pack built around the TEC route, the notice history, and the strongest statutory ground available.
What's included in your Order for Recovery Response
Every response is designed to identify the correct reset route and reduce the risk of the case moving unnecessarily to bailiff enforcement.
This gives you a structured TEC response instead of guessing which form, wording, or evidence applies.
- PCN number, vehicle registration, Order for Recovery date, and amount due
- A timeline of the notices received and missing
- The strongest TEC response ground and evidence checklist
- Witness statement or statutory declaration wording guidance
- Filing instructions for the Traffic Enforcement Centre
- Next-step guidance if the case is reset, refused, or moves toward enforcement
“Successful appeal against a PCN from a car park with poorly worded signs. Premier Park rejected my first appeal, so I went to the ombudsman where it was accepted. Definitely worth the effort.”
S.M.
Premier Park Appeal
“Totally worth it to save over a hundred pounds being robbed by Horizon. Answer a couple of questions and you get a letter that you send off. My penalty notice was cancelled.”
J.T.
Horizon Parking
“Got caught at an infamous scam hotspot. I know I could have appealed myself but could not afford the time to trawl through forums. Parking Mate handled everything and the charge was cancelled.”
R.L.
ParkingEye charge at Aldi
4. Submit Response to the Traffic Enforcement Centre
The Order for Recovery response is normally filed with the Traffic Enforcement Centre, not as a normal appeal to the council. You should still keep the council informed where required and save proof of every submission.
- Download the completed TEC response documents prepared by Parking Mate UK
- Check the Order for Recovery deadline printed on the notice
- Confirm whether the case needs a witness statement, statutory declaration, or out-of-time application
- Attach or keep the supporting evidence required for your ground
- Submit the response to the Traffic Enforcement Centre and keep proof of submission
- Send a copy to the council or enforcement contact where the instructions require it
Do not send a normal appeal letter if the Order for Recovery requires a formal TEC response.
If you are already outside the deadline, the route may require an out-of-time application and a clear explanation for the delay.
Council and TEC Contact Route
Address: Use the Traffic Enforcement Centre instructions on the Order for Recovery and the council contact details printed on your notice.
Send copies only and retain proof of submission or postage.
Keep the Order for Recovery, the completed form, evidence, and confirmation in one file.
If bailiff enforcement has already started, keep a copy ready to send to the enforcement company once the TEC response is filed.
5. TEC Decision and Reset
After the TEC receives the response, the case may be reset, refused, or require further action. The outcome depends on the ground used, timing, and whether the response was filed in time.
- Go to Traffic Enforcement Centre and start your appeal
- If accepted, the Order for Recovery is revoked and the case returns to the correct earlier stage
- If refused, you may need to consider the next available review or enforcement response route
- If reset, prepare the appeal or representation for the stage the case returns to
- Keep all TEC confirmations, court notices, and council correspondence
An Order for Recovery is not a County Court Judgment. It is a court registration step within the council PCN enforcement process.
6. Order for Recovery Outcome
There are three common outcomes after an Order for Recovery response: the case is reset, the response is refused, or enforcement continues because no valid response was filed.
If the case is reset, it usually returns to an earlier appeal stage where the original PCN grounds can be argued properly.
- Order for Recovery revoked and case reset
- Charge Certificate cancelled as part of the reset process
- Case returns to an earlier PCN, Notice to Owner, representation, or tribunal stage
- If refused or ignored, bailiff enforcement may follow
Parking Mate UK can prepare the TEC response, organise the evidence, and prepare the next appeal or enforcement document depending on the outcome.
We will provide:
- A structured Order for Recovery response pack
- TEC form and evidence guidance
- Next-step guidance if the case is reset, refused, or escalates
Runnymede Order for Recovery FAQ
What is a Runnymede Order for Recovery?
A Runnymede Order for Recovery means Runnymede has registered the unpaid penalty with the Traffic Enforcement Centre after the Charge Certificate stage. It is not a CCJ, but it can lead to bailiff enforcement if ignored.
Can I appeal an Order for Recovery?
You do not usually make a normal appeal at this stage. You respond using the correct Traffic Enforcement Centre witness statement, statutory declaration, or out-of-time route where a valid ground applies.
Does an Order for Recovery affect my credit file?
No. An Order for Recovery for a council PCN is not a County Court Judgment and does not appear on your credit file. The risk is bailiff enforcement if it is ignored.
What happens if the TEC response is accepted?
The Order for Recovery is normally revoked and the Charge Certificate is cancelled. The case then returns to the correct earlier stage so the PCN can be dealt with properly.
What evidence do I need?
Keep the Order for Recovery, PCN, Notice to Owner, Charge Certificate, rejection letters, proof of address, proof of representations, tribunal records, payment proof, and any documents showing what was missed or wrongly issued.
How much does an Order for Recovery response cost?
Parking Mate UK prepares an Order for Recovery response pack with TEC form guidance, evidence checklist, and next-step instructions for £49.99.
Written by Parking Mate UK | Last updated: 21 May 2026
Parking Mate UK has helped UK motorists challenge parking tickets, respond to court claims, and stop bailiff enforcement since 2018. We prepare stage-specific documents for council PCNs, Charge Certificates, Orders for Recovery, TEC responses, and enforcement notices.
