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SPACE RACE

Is it illegal to park across someone’s driveway and can people park in front of your house?

LOCATING a parking space can be a stressful experience in crowded residential areas. 

It can be frustrating if somebody parks in a spot in front of your home preventing you from leaving your car there. But there are actually some instances where this is perfectly fine in the eyes of the law.

 It can be frustrating if a driver blocks your driveway but sometimes there are no legal consequences for the owner of the parked car
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It can be frustrating if a driver blocks your driveway but sometimes there are no legal consequences for the owner of the parked car

Are you entitled to the parking space outside your house?

There is no legal requirement for your neighbours to try to leave the space outside your house for you, though some may do so out of courtesy.

It is actually not "your right" to park in front of your property unless you have a designated parking space and although it might be tempting you're not allowed to save "your" space with a cone either.

Leaving anything on the road can be classed as an obstruction and is illegal - unless you've been given permission by the council.

Any member of the public can park on your street, provided it isn't governed by residents' parking permits and as as long as they are complying with restrictions and not causing obstructions.

If your street uses permits, anyone with the right permit can park anywhere in the relevant zone.

There's also no law on how long someone can park in the same space for, unless police think the car has been abandoned.

If your neighbours take up a space on the street when they have a perfectly good driveway they don't use, they're doing absolutely nothing wrong in the eyes of the law - even if they're denying you access to that much-needed last parking space.

 Make sure where you park is legal
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Make sure where you park is legal

It is, however, illegal to park directly outside a school, on the zig-zag lines to a pedestrian crossing, and in designated marked bays you don't have a permit for.

Is it illegal to park across someone's driveway?

Although it might feel like it should be, someone blocking your driveway it is not technically illegal.

They are committing a parking offence, however, if their wheel is over the dropped kerb.

There are two types of dropped kerbs: those for pedestrians, especially those with buggies or in wheelchairs, and those for drivers to access driveways.

Vehicles parked across dropped kerbs can be ticketed, even if they're not fully blocking it, but parking very close to a dropped kerb or directly opposite it isn't illegal, even if it restricts access.

In the rare case someone is blocking your driveway and will not leave, you should call the local council as it is a civil matter, it is not a police case. 

The police could become involved if the car is causing an obstruction in the road.

According to the Highway Code, a car cannot cause an obstruction to the road but this does not include obstructing access to private land. 

Is it illegal for someone to park on your driveway?

A strange legal loophole means anyone can park on your driveway - and there's not much you can do about it.

There have been a number of cases in the UK where homeowners have been stuck with a stranger's car on their driveway, only to be told neither police nor local authorities have the power to move it.

In the instance of a stranger parking on your driveway, an issue arises where the line between criminal and civil law is blurred.

If a car is parked on a public road and it's blocking your driveway, local authorities certainly have the power to issue a fine.

But once the car moves on to your drive, it's technically on private property - and local councils have no jurisdiction.

Councils are required to remove abandoned cars from both public and private property, but if the motor in question is taxed, insured, has a valid MOT and isn't in a dangerous condition, they are unlikely to touch it on private land.

Police will acknowledge the car is technically trespassing, but they will classify it as a civil offence, dropping it far down their priority list and meaning you would need an eviction notice from the courts.

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