I paid the congestion charge, but somehow still got fined

My payment was showing as ‘pending’, so I got in touch with Transport for London, but it didn’t help

I find myself caught up in Transport for London’s Orwellian bureaucracy, as you described it in your 2019 article about online payment glitches. I paid the £15 congestion charge on the day I drove into the city three months ago. The payment showed as pending on my bank statement for a week, so I contacted my bank, which advised me to get in touch with TfL. I emailed two screenshots showing the transaction. Days later I received a penalty charge notice (PCN) of £160 and again contacted TfL. I received no response. I therefore made a formal representation and cited your article, but my appeal has been rejected.
IB, London

I had repeated complaints about this before the pandemic. Like you, drivers paid the charge online and the payment showed as pending on their bank accounts for several days before disappearing. TfL insists that drivers in this position should wait for a PCN to be issued, then challenge it. When an appeal fails, they are directed to London Tribunals, but they risk losing the 50% discount applied to payments made within 14 days of the PCN.

In 2019, TfL said it had made changes following my exposés. It’s dispiriting, therefore, to be back to square one in your case. Payments can fail for all sorts of reasons, but what’s outrageous is that TfL ignored the evidence showing you made yours in good faith and continued to do so it until I confronted it. It then immediately realised that you were not at fault and cancelled the PCN and the original congestion charge. “We have improved our processes so that anyone who attempts to pay the congestion charge should not receive a fine,” it said. “It is clear our contractor Capita has not followed these processes so we have reminded them of their importance.”

Capita said: ‘This was an isolated incident as a result of human error and has since been resolved.”

Email your.problems@observer.co.uk. Include an address and phone number. Submission and publication are subject to our terms and conditions

Contributor

Anna Tims

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
I had evidence I’d paid London congestion charge but robot said ‘no’
I even sent a screenshot of my online statement but the charge still stands

Anna Tims

30, May, 2019 @6:00 AM

Article image
Think you paid the congestion charge? That could be a £160 fine anyway
Despite solid evidence that drivers have paid the £11.50 fee online in advance, they are still receiving penalty charge notices

Anna Tims

25, Aug, 2019 @8:00 AM

Article image
TfL says I didn’t pay the congestion charge, then issues a refund
Despite a bank statement proving the payments I can’t persuade it it has made an error

Anna Tims

09, Aug, 2018 @6:00 AM

Article image
£500 Hertz deposit that somehow went ‘undetected’
It was supposed to be for a deposit which we were told would be refunded. But we can’t get it back

Anna Tims

26, Apr, 2019 @6:00 AM

Article image
My father was fined for parking in a reserved space for which he had paid £2,000
On the reservation agreement the parking is circled and he was given a key fob to access it

Anna Tims

21, Sep, 2022 @6:00 AM

Baffled by the London congestion charge
TfL's letter was totally unclear, but they still want another £120

Anna Tims

24, Feb, 2013 @7:01 AM

Article image
ASA clamps down on copycat congestion charge site
Consumers say the website positioned itself as the official TfL congestion charge website and tricked them into paying more than they needed to

Miles Brignall

09, Jan, 2014 @2:39 PM

Article image
NHS staff are being fined for parking at their own health centre
Parkingeye is issuing tickets to them because cameras monitoring a nearby Aldi have been set up wrongly

Anna Tims

25, May, 2022 @6:00 AM

Article image
I was fined £100 for charging my car at a motorway service station
The time limit for free parking is two hours but I had to wait 30 minutes just to get the use of a charging point

Anna Tims

30, Jun, 2022 @6:00 AM

Article image
I paid – but trying to fight debt collectors is taking its toll
There is no point of contact and it seems a deliberate ploy to harass motorists

Anna Tims

04, Mar, 2020 @7:00 AM