Why You Should Pay For Parking On Your Green Holidays!
You might be paying to park on gravel or grass – but you are saving the view!
Have you ever stopped and thought about where the money from that Pay & Display machine actually goes?
Well, have you considered that it is those few coins you push in the meter that are bringing you to that car park in the first place!
Without the ease of that carpark – would you really be visiting that place at all? If there was no parking in that cute village – would you even go there? I mean, if parking was banned around Longleat, Stonehenge, The Eden Project, the Lake District, Legoland and Hadrian’s Wall – would you go and visit them?
If your favourite restaurant, gastropub or countryside tavern had no parking – would they be your favourite anymore?
The Penny Drops!
The land that car parks are on always costs somebody money. Whether it is the cost of maintenance, the cost of renting it off a landlord, or even the cost of not selling it – there is money involved with leaving land ‘spare’ just for cars.
Many businesses and companies think that it is worth the cost in terms of the customers it attracts – and they will usually offer ‘free’ parking to customers. They will however factor in the cost of that parking into your bill somehow – but you don’t mind paying it in exchange for great food and great service!

photo credit: James Byrum
Others without food or the chance to actually come face to face with their customers sometimes charge for the parking itself. The great service is however a bit more difficult for some to see.
Countryside Parking:
When you turn up to a car park in the countryside to walk your dogs, spend time outside with your family, visit that castle, earthworks or river, or just admire the view – you are stepping into that service without even noticing.
Someone has had to create that car park – and then maintain it. Someone else probably makes sure that there is an up-to-date information sign for you to read, a leaflet or 2 about wildlife and landmarks, some seating and possibly some signage to make your stop here more pleasant.
Yet another person might be in charge of installing and maintaining toilets on the site, creating a bus link to the site and even finding/hiring an ice cream van or hot food stall on site in the summer.
Another team of staff or volunteers may well be engaged in fixing fencing, marking parking bays and bicycle racks, fixing potholes amongst other things. They may also arrange for bins on site – both rubbish and dog poop – and even for picking up dropped litter in and around the car park and disposing of it elsewhere.
Now can you see the service?
So if you turn up at a place you want to visit and you easily find a well marked parking space which isn’t filled with empty food wrappers and dog poo – the view is just as you expected with information and clean toilets close by – and there isn’t a burnt-out car in sight – why are you complaining about paying £2 to park there?
You wanted to visit this site didn’t you? And you expect it to be as beautiful as it was last time? So why are you not happy to pay somebody for keeping it that way?
Sometimes, people assume that all councils just charge for car parks to ‘make more money out of us’ – but if you look closely at parking signs – most of them go directly into funding the site you pay at – like all National Trust car parks (however if you are an NT member your parking is free anyway).
So before you grumble about spending a few coins to be somewhere you want to be (I mean it is just like paying an entrance fee to visit a museum or castle, etc except it is outdoors) – think about these 2 things:
1) The fact that you actually wanted to come here to this exact carpark of your own accord because it offers something special or something different, and;
2) The fact that there are plenty of free carparks and laybys across the country and plenty of other bits of quite similar-looking fields you could go for a walk across instead!
Your choice!





