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Parking host QR flyers: turn local visibility into a real listing

July 12, 2026 · Guides for hosts

A parking host QR flyer can help a real neighbourhood find a real space, but only when it leads to a clear public listing and is placed with permission. A tiny “parking available” notice without a location, vehicle fit, hours, or safe contact path creates questions rather than bookings. The flyer should make the next step obvious for a driver and the offer truthful for a host.

Put the right information on the card

Use a short headline, the neighbourhood or useful landmark, the type of space, broad availability, and one QR code that opens the public host or listing page. Mention whether it is a driveway, garage, courtyard, covered space, or EV-enabled space only when that is true. Do not print gate codes, keys, personal phone numbers, identity documents, or details that expose a household.

The public host page explains the listing flow, while the photo guide and house-rules guide help make the destination page credible. If you distribute a flyer for a live listing, use a tagged URL or campaign link so you can distinguish a building notice from a hotel, coworking, or community referral.

Ask before you post

Get permission from the building manager, shop, coworking space, venue, or community moderator. Never attach cards to cars, block signs, or imply an official partnership that does not exist. Replace damaged or outdated cards and remove them when the space is no longer available.

A QR flyer is an acquisition aid, not a substitute for good access instructions, reliable availability, and a real booking flow. Start with a small local batch, watch the questions and scans, then improve the public listing before printing more.

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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