Parking Control Management Appeal: How to Fight Your Parking Charge
Last updated: June 2025 · IPC Member · Appeals via IAS
If you have received a parking charge notice from Parking Control Management Limited (PCM), you are not alone. Parking Control Management is one of many private parking operators in the UK that issues thousands of charges each year. The good news is that many of these charges can be successfully challenged on appeal or defended in court.
This guide explains everything you need to know about fighting a Parking Control Management parking charge, including how to appeal, what to do if a debt collector contacts you, and how to defend a county court claim. Every section is based on the law as it applies to private parking charges in England and Wales.
In This Guide
- About Parking Control Management
- Where Does Parking Control Management Operate?
- How to Appeal a Parking Control Management Parking Charge
- Common Reasons Parking Control Management PCNs Get Cancelled
- Parking Control Management and Debt Collection
- How to Defend a Parking Control Management Court Claim
- Key Information
- Frequently Asked Questions
About Parking Control Management
Parking Control Management (PCM) is a private parking operator managing car parks primarily at commercial and retail locations across the UK.
Parking Control Management is a member of the International Parking Community (IPC), which means they are required to follow the IPC Code of Practice when issuing parking charges. This code sets out standards for signage, notice periods, appeals processes, and debt collection practices. When Parking Control Management fails to comply with these standards, it provides strong grounds for challenging a charge.
Like all private parking operators, Parking Control Management issues parking charge notices under contract law, not criminal law. A Parking Control Management parking charge is an invoice, not a fine. You cannot receive points on your licence, you will not get a criminal record, and no bailiff with statutory powers can enforce a private parking charge. The maximum consequence of an unpaid charge is a county court judgment if Parking Control Management decides to pursue the matter through the civil courts.
Where Does Parking Control Management Operate?
Parking Control Management manages car parks at a variety of locations across the UK. Understanding where they operate can help you identify whether the site where you received your charge is one of their managed locations, and whether the specific conditions at that site give rise to any grounds for appeal.
The following are the most common types of locations where Parking Control Management operates:
- --Retail car parks
- --Commercial properties
- --Leisure venues
- --Residential sites
- --Business parks
Each type of location presents different challenges and opportunities when appealing a charge. For example, charges issued at hospital car parks may be particularly susceptible to challenge on the grounds of mitigating circumstances, while charges at retail car parks often raise questions about whether the signage adequately communicates the terms and whether the time limit is reasonable for the activities at that site.
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Generate your Parking Control Management defenceHow to Appeal a Parking Control Management Parking Charge
PCM handles appeals directly. As an IPC member, the IAS handles independent appeals.
Successfully appealing a Parking Control Management parking charge requires a structured approach. Simply stating that you disagree with the charge or that you think it is unfair is unlikely to succeed. Your appeal must identify specific legal or procedural grounds and be supported by evidence where possible.
Step 1: Gather Your Evidence
Before writing your appeal, collect all available evidence. This includes the parking charge notice itself, any photographs you took at the time, payment receipts or app confirmations, and any correspondence you have already received from Parking Control Management. If you did not take photographs of the signage at the car park, return to the site as soon as possible and photograph every sign, including any that are damaged, obscured, or difficult to read.
You should also check whether the PCN was served within the required time limits under POFA 2012. If you received the notice by post, calculate whether it was sent within 14 days of the alleged contravention or within 14 days of the DVLA providing your keeper details. Late service is one of the strongest grounds for appeal and one of the most common errors made by parking operators.
Step 2: Submit Your Appeal to Parking Control Management
Write a clear, structured appeal that sets out your grounds for challenging the charge. Avoid emotional language and focus on specific facts and legal points. Reference the relevant provisions of POFA 2012, the IPC Code of Practice, and any applicable case law. Include copies of your evidence and request that Parking Control Management provide copies of their ANPR images, DVLA enquiry, and site signage photographs.
Step 3: Escalate to IAS
If Parking Control Management rejects your appeal, you have 28 days to escalate to IAS. This is a free, independent review of your case. The Independent Appeals Service (IAS) handles appeals for IPC members. The decision of IAS is binding on Parking Control Management but not on you, meaning there is no downside to escalating.
Your submission to IAS should be more detailed than your initial appeal. This is your best opportunity to have the charge cancelled without going to court, so treat it seriously. Present your arguments clearly, reference the law, and include all supporting evidence. For a more detailed guide, see our complete guide to appealing a parking charge notice.
Common Reasons Parking Control Management PCNs Get Cancelled
Every parking company has patterns of behaviour and common issues that arise in appeals and court cases. Understanding the specific weaknesses in Parking Control Management's enforcement practices can help you build a stronger appeal. The following issues are commonly raised in successful challenges against Parking Control Management charges:
Signage not meeting IPC code of practice standards
Permit system issues at managed sites
Charges to visitors and customers of businesses on site
Inconsistent enforcement
Poor appeal handling
In addition to these company-specific issues, all private parking charges can be challenged on general legal grounds. These include non-compliance with POFA 2012 (failure to serve a compliant Notice to Keeper within the required timeframe), inadequate signage that fails to form a valid contract, disproportionate charges that fail the test established in ParkingEye v Beavis [2015] UKSC 67, and unfair contract terms under the Consumer Rights Act 2015.
The strongest appeals combine company-specific issues with broader legal arguments. For example, if Parking Control Management issued a charge based on ANPR evidence that you believe to be inaccurate, you would challenge both the reliability of the evidence and the operator's compliance with POFA 2012 notice requirements. Multiple independent grounds for appeal significantly increase your chances of success.
Parking Control Management and Gladstones Solicitors
If you do not pay a Parking Control Management parking charge or your appeal is unsuccessful, the debt will typically be passed to a debt collection agency. Parking Control Management uses Gladstones Solicitors for this purpose. You may receive letters from this agency demanding payment, sometimes with added fees and increasingly urgent language.
It is important to understand that debt collectors do not have any special legal powers. They cannot send bailiffs to your property, they cannot affect your credit score (unless a county court judgment is obtained), and they cannot force you to pay. Their letters are designed to create a sense of urgency and pressure you into paying. While the letters may look intimidating, they are a standard part of the private parking enforcement process.
If you receive a letter from Gladstones Solicitors about a Parking Control Management charge, you should respond in writing. State that you dispute the charge and request full evidence that the charge is valid, including proof that POFA 2012 requirements were met. Do not ignore the correspondence entirely, but equally do not feel pressured into paying a charge you believe is invalid.
For detailed guidance on responding to debt collection letters, see our guides on Gladstones Solicitors.
How to Defend a Parking Control Management Court Claim
PCM uses Gladstones Solicitors for court action. They pursue claims but volumes are lower than the major operators.
If Parking Control Management files a county court claim against you, you will receive a Claim Form (N1) from the County Court Business Centre. It is essential that you respond within the time limits. You have 14 days from service to acknowledge the claim and a total of 28 days to file your defence. Failing to respond will result in a default judgment, which will appear on your credit record and can be enforced.
A well-drafted defence should address every element of the claimant's case and raise all available legal arguments. Key defences against Parking Control Management claims typically include: POFA 2012 non-compliance (failure to serve compliant notices within the required timeframes), challenges to the formation of the alleged contract (inadequate signage), the proportionality of the charge, and any specific procedural failings identified in your case.
Many parking companies, including Parking Control Management, will discontinue their claim when they receive a properly prepared defence. This is because the cost of proceeding to a contested hearing often exceeds the value of the charge. However, you should always prepare your defence as if the case will go to trial. For detailed guidance, see our County Court Defence Guide.
Key Information
| Full Name | Parking Control Management Limited (PCM) |
| Trade Body | International Parking Community (IPC) |
| Independent Appeal Body | IAS (Independent Appeals Service) |
| Debt Collector | Gladstones Solicitors |
| Appeal Deadline | 28 days from date of notice (reduced rate period) |
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I have to pay a Parking Control Management parking charge?
A Parking Control Management parking charge notice is not a criminal fine. It is an invoice based on an alleged breach of contract between the motorist and the landowner. While the Supreme Court ruled in ParkingEye v Beavis (2015) that private parking charges can be enforceable, you have the right to appeal the charge and challenge it on multiple grounds, including non-compliance with POFA 2012, inadequate signage, and procedural errors.
How do I appeal a Parking Control Management parking charge?
You can appeal a Parking Control Management charge in two stages. First, submit a formal appeal directly to Parking Control Management through their website or by post. If they reject your appeal, you can escalate to IAS, which is the independent appeals service for IPC members. IAS decisions are binding on Parking Control Management but not on you, so there is no risk in escalating.
Can Parking Control Management take me to court?
Yes, Parking Control Management can pursue a county court claim for an unpaid parking charge. However, many operators use threatening debt collection letters as a pressure tactic and a significant number of claims are discontinued when the motorist files a properly drafted defence. If you do receive a court claim, you have 14 days to acknowledge it and 28 days to file your defence.
What should I do if Gladstones Solicitors contacts me about a Parking Control Management charge?
Gladstones Solicitors is a debt collection agency used by Parking Control Management. Their letters are designed to pressure you into paying but they do not have any special legal powers. You are not obligated to pay simply because a debt collector has written to you. You should respond in writing, dispute the debt, and request evidence that the charge is valid and that POFA 2012 requirements have been met.
What is the time limit for Parking Control Management to issue a parking charge?
Under POFA 2012, the operator must issue a Notice to Driver within 14 days of the alleged contravention (or within 14 days of obtaining keeper details from the DVLA). If Parking Control Management misses this deadline, the POFA 2012 keeper liability mechanism fails, and they cannot hold the registered keeper liable. The overall limitation period for bringing a contractual claim is six years, but the POFA notice requirements create much shorter practical deadlines.
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Generate your Parking Control Management defenceHelpful Guides
- How to Appeal a Parking Charge Notice
Complete step-by-step guide to appealing any private parking charge.
- County Court Defence Guide
How to defend a private parking charge in county court.
- POFA 2012 Explained
Detailed breakdown of the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012 and keeper liability.
- What Happens If I Don't Pay?
The real consequences of ignoring a private parking charge notice.