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Parking host permission check: confirm you can offer the space

July 12, 2026 · Guides for hosts

Visibility is useful only when the listing can be honoured. Before publishing a driveway, garage, courtyard, or marked bay, confirm that you own it or have permission to make it available for the stated hours. A driver should receive a real parking right for the booked space, not an assumption based on living nearby.

Check the right documents and people

Read the lease, purchase documents, house rules, homeowners’ association rules, and any employer or facility agreement that controls the space. If the bay is shared, ask who can grant permission and whether access through a common gate has additional conditions. Check whether the offer includes only the bay or also a gate, remote, key, charging point, or loading area. Do not list a neighbouring space because it is often empty.

The Czech rules and tax guide is a starting point for questions that may require professional advice. Parking in an apartment building and the host house-rules guide cover common operational risks, but neither replaces the current agreement that governs your property.

Describe the permission honestly

State what the driver may use, what they may not use, and how access is handed over. Never promise an exclusive public-street bay, a resident permit, or a right to stop in a fire route. If permission ends or changes, close the calendar and update the listing before accepting another booking.

Once the authority and access are confirmed, list the spot with accurate hours, fit, photos, and fallback instructions. Permission is the foundation of durable host visibility.

Your empty spot is money

List a driveway, garage, or reserved spot on Figpark and earn from the hours it sits empty. Drivers book and pay online — the app keeps the reservation details together.

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