
The consequences of not paying for parking after scanning the QR code will affect personal credit, and vehicles that evade payment will not be able to undergo annual inspection. In cases of malicious non-payment, the vehicle owner will receive a notice of unpaid fees. According to requirements, the owner must pay the outstanding fees within 15 days. For individuals or units that fail to complete the payment within the specified time, the list of vehicle owners will be publicly announced through notifications and recorded in the social credit system. Further measures, such as late fees or legal action, will be taken to recover the unpaid fees. Below are the precautions for payment methods: 1. Payment method: Credit cards should be bound in advance according to regulations, or other payment methods that provide credit guarantees should be selected (credit card binding supports 14 banks). 2. Parking: The parking payment process should be initiated within 10 minutes after the vehicle enters the roadside parking space, and a successful parking application should be completed. 3. Deduction: The fee for using the temporary roadside parking space should be paid within the specified time (within 48 hours after parking). If the user fails to pay the fee within the specified time, the roadside parking management unit may deduct the corresponding amount from the bound credit card.

Last time my friend tried to save time by not scanning the QR code to pay the parking fee, and the consequences were terrible. Two weeks later, he received a payment reminder, and the original 20-yuan parking fee had skyrocketed to over 80 yuan, a fourfold increase. They even warned that failure to pay would affect his credit system, potentially impacting future home loans. What's more annoying is that recently, he's been frequently stopped by parking inspectors demanding payment, making him late all the time. I suggest scanning and paying immediately after parking to avoid the bill getting more expensive. In some cities, they even place warning notices on unpaid vehicles or clamp the tires, which is even more troublesome.

As a commuter who has to find roadside parking every day, the worst fear is owing parking fees. Last time, I was in a hurry for a meeting and forgot to pay, and the next day I received a text reminder. The management company said that after three days, a 3% late fee would be charged daily, and after thirty days, it would directly escalate to court proceedings. Now I’ve developed the habit of paying immediately after parking and set a parking alarm on my phone. By the way, a reminder: some parking lots have networked systems, and vehicles with unpaid fees can be identified even when entering mall garages, forcing payment before exit. Don’t risk big losses for small gains—unpaid fees are unavoidable.


