Rent out a parking spot to a business: plan the agreement and access
Renting a parking spot to a business can look simpler than many short bookings: one driver, one routine, and one payment. In practice, a company may change vehicles, need access at unusual hours, ask for records, or expect the space to remain available on days when your personal plans change. Define the operating reality before treating a recurring request as guaranteed income.
Clarify what the company actually needs
Ask whether the space is for one named vehicle, several rotating vehicles, visitors, deliveries, or an employee who changes cars. Record the dimensions, height, gate, charging expectations, arrival hours, and who is responsible for communicating a new plate. A parking-space agreement guide can help you list the practical questions, but it is not a substitute for checking your authority to offer the space or getting professional advice on a formal contract.
Recurring access also needs a fallback. Decide what happens if the gate remote is lost, the driveway is blocked, the driver arrives outside the agreed window, or the space must be unavailable for maintenance. Keep private access details out of public marketing and share them only through an appropriate confirmed process.
Price the commitment honestly
Compare the value of predictable occupancy with the flexibility you give up. The monthly pricing guide and the host earnings calculator are planning tools; they do not know your permission, costs, taxes, repairs, or the real demand for the exact space. Put the assumptions in writing and review them when the vehicle, schedule, or access changes.
Before contacting a business, start with the public host guide and keep records of permission, dates, payments, vehicle details, and incidents. A clear offer protects the host, the company, and the neighbours who rely on the same entrance.