Parking host tenant permission: confirm authority before offering a space
If you are a tenant thinking about offering a parking space, permission is the first part of the listing. A key, remote, or regular use of a bay does not automatically mean you may let another driver use it. The host must be able to explain the authority behind the offer before accepting a booking.
Check the right documents
Read the lease, parking allocation, house rules, and any building or owners' association instructions. Ask the landlord or manager whether short-term sharing, subletting, visitor access, and commercial use are allowed. The apartment-building parking guide and rental agreement guide help organise the questions, but they do not replace the contract or a current legal answer.
Keep written confirmation when permission is required. Clarify who may enter, whether the bay is tied to a specific vehicle, whether a remote or access card may be shared, and who handles a broken gate or a neighbour complaint. Never publish a private code or promise access that depends on someone else's approval.
Make the listing match the authority
Describe the space honestly, including the hours, vehicle fit, gate, and stop conditions. If the permission ends, the building changes its rules, or the landlord withdraws consent, close the relevant availability and contact affected drivers promptly. A clean cancellation is better than a booking that cannot be honoured.
Tenant-host listings earn trust through proof of authority and clear limits. Confirm permission first, then write the listing around what you can actually control.