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Councils plunder £1.2 billion profits from car parking charges in 12 months

The amount councils generate from car parking has risen in the last year, making it an even bigger money-maker for local authorities

Parking payment machine

Councils are raking in hundreds of millions of pounds of profits per year from on- and off-street car parking, with critics saying this kind of “plunder” is down to a lack of restrictions on what authorities can charge motorists to park their cars.

The latest data from the Ministry of Housing, Communities & Local Government shows that local councils in England generated a grand total of £2.3 billion from parking between April 2024 and March 2025 which, when taking into account running and maintenance costs, equates to an eye-watering £1.2 billion in profit.

As you might expect, it’s the London Boroughs that are the biggest offenders in this regard, alone generating over half a billion pounds in surplus. On-street parking accounted for the vast majority of this.

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In fact, the likes of Westminster drew £90.6 million in profits from a £129.4 million total income, while Kensington and Chelsea took £63.2 million from drivers and thus made £49.7 million last year from parking.

Looking at the rest of England, Nottingham City Council reported £20 million in profits last year, with Manchester and Bournemouth having recorded £19.5 million and £17.1 million surpluses respectively.

Parking plunder spree

With overall profits having risen from just under £900 million prior to the COVID-19 pandemic and by roughly £150 million in the last year, the AA branded these latest figures as a “record parking plunder spree”.

The association’s head of roads Policy, Jack Cousens said: “For too many councils, particularly in cities, the cost of parking seems to have gone from a reasonable charge to a full-on local tax. Why? Because there is next to nothing holding them back.”

This being the case, Cousens accused councils of “creat[ing] new ways and reasons to plunder more money from people with cars, often on low incomes travelling in for work”. 

All of this comes after the government announced a consultation on drafting a code of practice for the private parking sector. Such a document would not affect council-owned car parks, however, with little-to-no legislation dictating what local authorities can charge.

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Consumer reporter

Tom is Auto Express' Consumer reporter, meaning he spends his time investigating the stories that matter to all motorists - enthusiasts or otherwise. An ex-BBC journalist and Multimedia Journalism graduate, Tom previously wrote for partner sites Carbuyer and DrivingElectric and you may also spot him throwing away his dignity by filming videos for the Auto Express social media channels.

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