Key Points
- Bristol City Council is exploring a workplace parking levy that could charge employers for parking spaces they provide to staff.
- Councillor Ed Plowden said the charge could be “about the same as a return bus ticket or a little bit more”, according to the city councillor leading on transport.
- The council says the scheme aims to reduce congestion and air pollution, while funding better public transport in the city.
- ITV News reported that the levy could affect roughly 9,000 people who currently park at work for free.
- The council says no final decision has been made and that a public consultation is part of the planned next stage.
- The project timeline on the council website sets out an outline business case through April 2026, followed by consultation and approval work from May 2026 to December 2027.
uk/local/bristol-council/">Bristol Council (Bristol Express News) June 24, 2026, is moving forward with plans to examine a workplace parking levy, with the authority saying it is still in the development stage and no final decision has been taken yet. As reported by the Bristol City Council project page, the scheme would place an annual charge on employers for parking spaces they provide at work, with the money intended to support sustainable transport and improved travel options.
The council says it is developing an outline business case for the scheme and that the levy is being explored because of concerns about congestion, air quality, and the wider impact of car use on the city. The same council material says the levy is meant to encourage employers to manage the number of workplace parking spaces they provide and to promote alternative transport choices.
How much could employers be charged?
According to the report by Alex Seabrook of ITV News West Country, Cllr Ed Plowden said the charge would be “about the same as a return bus ticket or a little bit more”.
ITV News also reported that the council is considering a figure of £20 a week for parking at city centre offices, although that proposal is still subject to the committee process.
The report said the levy would not be charged directly to workers, but to businesses that currently offer free parking to staff. It added that employers would then decide whether to absorb the cost themselves or pass it on to employees.
Who could be affected?
ITV News West Country reported that the levy could affect around 9,000 people who currently park at their workplace for free.
The council page says the purpose of the charge is to reduce reliance on private cars and create a shift towards more sustainable travel.
Exceptions may be considered for some groups, including disabled people who rely on private cars and hospital workers, according to ITV News.
That means the final design of the scheme may include exemptions or special arrangements for certain workers, although those details have not yet been finalised.
Why is the council backing it?
The council says Bristol faces major traffic and air quality pressures, and that congestion creates problems for businesses, deliveries, and access to work.
It says a workplace parking levy could generate revenue for public transport improvements while also encouraging more walking, cycling, and bus use.
ITV News reported that the committee report linked the levy to wider benefits, including lower car use and improved health and environmental outcomes.
The council page also says the scheme is being considered as part of efforts to provide realistic alternatives to private cars through better sustainable transport options.
What happens next?
The council website says the workplace parking levy remains in the discovery and business case stage, with updates due through public meetings of the Transport and Connectivity policy committee. It states that a public consultation, full business case, and scheme approval process would follow if the project moves ahead.
ITV News reported that councillors were due to approve the levy proposal at a meeting on 12 September in the earlier stage of the process.
The council timeline now shows possible implementation and operation no earlier than January 2028 to January 2029, indicating this is a long-term policy rather than an immediate change.
Background of the development
The workplace parking levy has been part of Bristol’s transport debate for some time, and it featured in the Green Party’s local election manifesto ahead of the 2024 vote, according to ITV News.
The council says the latest stage of work was approved in September 2024 when the Transport and Connectivity policy committee backed spending up to £1 million on stage one development of the project.
The council’s project page also says the money for that stage is being funded from Clean Air Zone revenue funding.
The wider policy discussion has focused on whether charging employers for staff parking could help Bristol reduce congestion while raising money for better transport choices.
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Prediction for affected groups
For employers that provide free parking, the biggest near-term effect is likely to be planning uncertainty, because the final cost, exemptions, and consultation outcomes are still unresolved.
For workers who drive to offices in Bristol, the proposal could eventually make commuting by car more expensive if businesses decide to pass on some or all of the charge.
For public transport users and people who want less congestion, the scheme could bring indirect benefits if revenue is used to improve services and if fewer drivers choose to commute by car.
For Bristol businesses, the policy may push a review of workplace travel arrangements, parking allocation, and staff commuting support once the consultation and business case stages are completed.
