A letter before claim is the final warning before a private parking operator takes you to court. You typically have 14 to 30 days to respond. Upload the letter and we will check whether you have a defence.
Ticket check
Whether your letter before claim has enforceable defects
Signage, timing, wording, and procedure issues
Your options at this stage and what to do next
A letter before claim (also called a letter before action or LBA) is a formal legal step that a private parking operator must take before issuing county court proceedings. Receiving one does not mean you will definitely end up in court — many operators do not follow through, and many claims fail because the original ticket had defects. Check yours now while you still have time.
Receiving a letter before claim can be stressful, but it does not automatically mean you should pay. Many of these notices contain defects in signage, wording, timing, or procedure that can form the basis of a successful challenge.
The rules that private parking operators must follow are detailed and specific. A missing sign, a late notice, or an incorrect code can all make the difference between a valid charge and one that should be cancelled.
Upload your notice and let Parking Mate AI check it against the requirements that apply to your exact situation. If defects are found, you will receive a professional letter ready to send.
Here is the typical process for dealing with this type of notice.
Take a photo of the notice or letter you have received and upload it. Parking Mate AI reads the details automatically.
Your notice is checked against signage rules, timing requirements, wording standards, and procedural obligations.
If defects are found, receive a professional appeal or defence letter citing the specific issues, ready to send.
The signs on site and the wording on your notice must meet specific legal standards. Missing or unclear signs are one of the most common defects.
There are strict time limits for issuing notices at every stage. A late notice can be grounds for cancellation.
The issuer must follow a set process when pursuing a charge. Skipped steps or incorrect procedures weaken their position.
Operators and councils must hold and present proper evidence. Missing photos, logs, or records can undermine the charge.
A photo or copy of the notice or letter
Any earlier reminders or replies
Relevant photos, screenshots, or records
A note of the key dates
Anything that supports your version of events
If a court claim form (N1) has already arrived, get your defence ready here.
View page→If you are still at the debt letter stage, check your options here.
View page→Is your letter before claim from ParkingEye? Get operator-specific court help.
View page→Common questions about parking ticket appeals and how the service works.
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 letter straight away.