Harrow PCN: How to Pay or Appeal
Got a Harrow Council parking ticket? See the current charges, your 14-day deadline for the reduced amount, and how to choose between paying and challenging. Clear, reassuring guidance.
How much is a Harrow parking ticket?
Harrow is an outer-London borough and applies the lower London charge band. Most tickets here appear in the pay bays around Harrow town centre and St George's, in Wealdstone and Pinner, and in residential permit streets. Check the notice before paying, because paying is treated as accepting the charge and closes the case.
| Contravention type | Full charge | Paid within 14 days |
|---|---|---|
| Higher-level parking (double yellows, loading bans, clearways) | £130 | £65 |
| Lower-level parking (single yellows, paid bays, permit bays) | £80 | £40 |
| Bus lane contravention | £130 | £65 |
| Moving traffic contravention (box junction, camera-issued) | £130 | £65 |
Pay within 14 days of the date your PCN is served to keep the 50% discount. The clock starts the day it is issued, not the day it reaches you.
Some main roads are handled elsewhere. Where a trunk road through the borough is a red route, it is enforced by Transport for London rather than Harrow Council, under a different reference and process. Check the issuing authority on the notice.
How to pay a Harrow PCN online
No council websites. No confusing forms. No legal jargon. Just a clear, calm guide through what to do next, right from your phone using Snapmyfine.
Take a photo of your PCN
Open Snapmyfine and snap your ticket. The app reads every detail automatically; council, fine amount, contravention code, and the deadlines that matter most.
We explain it in simple terms
No jargon, no legalese. The app tells you exactly what your ticket means, what your rights are, and whether you have real grounds to challenge it.
Pay or appeal: your choice, made easy
Pay securely through Open Banking in seconds. Or let us help you build a proper appeal letter. Calm, clear, and written the way councils actually respond to.



The app also watches your deadlines for you. We’ll remind you before the 14-day and 28-day windows close, so nothing slips through the cracks.
Deadlines and escalation timeline
A Harrow PCN will not lapse if you leave it; the only thing that changes is the cost. This is the order things happen in, and the dates that matter.
PCN issued
The notice is issued. Snap it with Snapmyfine and it sits in your dashboard straight away, with the clock already running. No post to wait for.
Pay at 50% discount or challenge
Either pay the reduced amount (£65 or £40) or send an informal challenge. Challenge inside these 14 days and, if the council says no, the discount is usually put back on the table.
Full charge due or Notice to Owner
With nothing paid or challenged, the full charge (£130 or £80) falls due and the council posts a Notice to Owner to the registered keeper.
Formal representations
From the Notice to Owner you get 28 days to make formal representations on legal grounds. This is the final step handled by the council itself.
Charge increases by 50%
Ignore the Notice to Owner and a Charge Certificate follows, lifting the charge by half, to £195 or £120. It is now a registered debt.
Enforcement agents
The debt is registered at the Traffic Enforcement Centre, after which enforcement agents (bailiffs) can be sent in and add their own fees on top.
How to challenge or appeal a Harrow PCN
There is no need for a solicitor, and every stage is free. You only go a step further if the last answer went against you.
Informal challenge
Send an informal challenge by email or by post. Give your PCN reference and anything that backs you up: photographs of the signs or bay markings, a payment receipt, or a note of what went wrong. If you challenge within the 14-day window and it is turned down, the discount is normally reinstated.
Formal representations
If the informal challenge fails, or if you wait, a Notice to Owner is sent to the registered keeper and you then have 28 days to make formal representations. This is the council's last word on the matter.
Appeal to London Tribunals
Should the council reject your formal representations, take it to London Tribunals, the independent adjudicator for the capital. It costs nothing, the adjudicator sits apart from the council, and a decision in your favour cancels the PCN outright.
Strong grounds include: photographs of missing or unclear signs, proof of payment such as an app receipt or ticket stub, loading or unloading evidence, a factual error on the PCN (wrong registration, location or time), or camera footage that does not clearly show your vehicle. A clear photo of the bay markings and the nearest sign, with a timestamp, is often the most useful evidence to gather.
Not sure which stage you're at, or how long you've got?
Get Snapmyfine and stay on top of your HarrowPCN, so you don't miss the discount window or the 28-day cutoff. The app reads your notice, tells you exactly where you stand, and reminds you before each deadline.
How to contact London Borough of Harrow parking enforcement
Quote your PCN reference exactly as printed on the notice. Have your vehicle registration ready.
Phone (automated payment)
020 8424 1220
Council office hours, Monday to Friday.
Postal address
Harrow Council, PO Box 951, Harrow, HA3 3RJ
Allow extra time for postal responses.
Contact details last verified July 2026. Phone numbers, portal URLs and postal addresses can change. Always confirm at 020 8424 1220.
Frequently asked questions about Harrow PCNs
If something's holding you back, it's probably answered here. Harrow-specific answers, not generic advice.
Handle your Harrow PCN in about a minute.
Snapmyfine works across all 33 London councils, Harrow included. Photograph the notice and the app reads it back to you, explains the contravention, says whether paying or challenging makes more sense, and reminds you before the deadline lands.
Get Snapmyfine free
This page offers general information about London Borough of Harrow Penalty Charge Notices and is not legal advice. Snapmyfine is a technology app for understanding and managing parking tickets, not a law firm. Always rely on the details printed on your own notice and the council's official guidance.

