A Indigo Park charge is a private, contractual charge — not a council fine — and that means there are well-established grounds to fight it.
Beat It reads your Indigo Park charge notice, builds the appeal around the signage, POFA and grace-period grounds that actually win, and submits it for you.
This is a private charge, not a council PCN
Indigo Park issues charges on private land. Despite the “Parking Charge Notice” label, it isn’t a Penalty Charge Notice from a council and it isn’t a fine — it’s a claim for breach of contract. That distinction matters: it means the charge only holds up if the signage, the keeper-liability paperwork and the grace periods were all done correctly. They frequently aren’t.
Step 1 — Snap a photo of the Indigo Park charge
Beat It reads the reference number, date, time, location and vehicle straight from the notice. No typing.
Step 2 — Answer a few quick questions
We ask about the signage, whether you paid, machine faults and any mitigating circumstances. Two minutes, maximum.
Step 3 — We write and submit the Indigo Park appeal
Our AI cites the contract, signage and POFA grounds Indigo Park responds to, submits it, and escalates to the independent appeals service if it’s wrongly rejected.
Private charges live or die on the detail. These are the grounds that most often get a Indigo Park charge cancelled — Beat It builds your letter around whichever ones apply to you.
The signage didn’t form a contract
A private charge only stands if the parking terms were displayed clearly enough to bind the driver — the principle the Supreme Court set out in ParkingEye v Beavis. If Indigo Park’s signs were small, high up, poorly lit, hidden by foliage, or absent at the entrance, no contract was formed and the charge falls away.
POFA 2012 wasn’t followed, so the keeper isn’t liable
If Indigo Park can’t identify the driver, it can only pursue the registered keeper by following the Protection of Freedoms Act 2012 Schedule 4 to the letter — including serving the Notice to Keeper within the statutory window and using the exact mandatory wording. A late or defective notice means there is no keeper liability at all.
The grace periods weren’t honoured
The Codes of Practice require a consideration period to read the signs and decide whether to stay, plus a grace period at the end before a charge is issued. Overstays of only a few minutes, or charges issued while you were still finding a space or a working machine, are routinely cancelled.
There was a genuine reason you couldn’t comply
A pay machine that was out of order, an app that wouldn’t take payment, a valid ticket that blew off the dashboard, a Blue Badge, or an ANPR camera that misread your plate are all strong mitigation. Indigo Park has discretion to cancel, and a well-evidenced appeal regularly succeeds.
The operator’s authority or charge is questionable
Indigo Park must have written authority from the landowner to issue and enforce charges, and the amount must reflect the Code’s cap. Where authority isn’t made out, or the charge is inflated beyond the permitted level, that’s a ground to challenge.
Indigo Park must belong to an accredited trade body — either the BPA (appeals escalate free to POPLA) or the IPC (appeals escalate to the Independent Appeals Service). Your rejection letter states which one, and Beat It escalates to the correct service automatically.
You don’t have to track deadlines or copy anything across — Beat It manages the first appeal and the escalation to the independent appeals service end to end.
Beat It checks every appeal against 500+ documented procedural, signage and contractual grounds. A few that frequently apply to private operators like Indigo Park:
Most drivers pay because the wording looks official and the process feels confusing. It doesn’t have to be — Beat It does the writing, the citations and the submission for you.
Start my Indigo Park appeal →Not legal advice. Beat It is an AI-assisted appeal service — outcomes are decided by Indigo Park and, if escalated, by the independent appeals service.