16 March 2026

A decade of moving traffic PCNs in London

 

Welcome to the goldmine which is PCNs for moving traffic contraventions. These are all enforced by cctv camera linked most of the time to a computer which identifies alleged contraventions (although council staff or contractors probably assume the selected clips are correct, when that isn't always the case).

The right to issue PCNs for moving traffic contraventions (banned turns, yellow box junctions and the many often part time 'no motor vehicles' streets known also as Low Traffic Neighbourhoods and School Streets have proliferated since Covid in 2020) started in 2003.

Back in 2015 many of these cameras would have been watched over by real people sat watching video screens who manually recorded what appeared to be contraventions. TfL still do it that way. However advances in technology now enable locations to be watched 24/7 by cameras linked to computers that look at the movement of vehicles and can tell when they go where they shouldn't, read the numberplate, send to DVLA for details of the registered keeper and then send out a PCN, all with no direct human intervention. They don't miss the slightest error.

That is the second factor which explains the fourfold increase in moving traffic PCNs over the decade. If we assumed a 50% recovery of what were £130 PCNs the income to councils in London would be £254,000,000 (they are now £160). 

The third factor is councils who decided to start using their powers which is definitely Kensington & Chelsea, Greenwich, Sutton, Barnet & Bromley and others like Bexley which had just started.

Only four councils failed to at least double their PCN count in the decade, being Brent, Waltham Forest, Kingston & Harrow. 

You need to chuck your satnav away and look out of the windscreen like a hawk. Join the Institute of Advanced Motoring or ROSPA and improve your observation skills.

The end. 

A decade of bus lane PCN in London

 



This is a very varied picture by borough.

Overall the number of bus lane PCNs has increased by 13% in 10 years which rather indicates a high level of compliance by motorists especially given the huge increase on TfL roads. Mr Mustard knows that TfL have recently put cameras in locations which were previously not covered including the North Circular at Palmers Green which caught out a lot of drivers who had noticed the absence of a camera for many years. Clapton Common was another location with a new camera and a local motorist had a dozen PCNs there as the driver didn't bother getting out of the bus lane even when the all traffic lane was empty and drove up it several times before the first PCN arrived. Mr Mustard declined to assist. Another representative stepped up but at £40 a pop.

The really interesting part is the 20 boroughs where the number of PCNs has decreased which suggests that local residents have learnt and probably it is mostly visitors who get caught. Mr Mustard doesn't think that many bus lanes will have been removed as they tend not to be once installed.

Next, moving traffic, which will make your eyes water. 

15 March 2026

A decade of parking PCN in London

Car ownership in London has been fairly stable for years, with a slight downward trend since 2016.

 

PCN numbers for parking would therefore follow the same trend, one would think?


As you can see, that isn't the case with parking PCN numbers going up by 54% over a decade. That however masks a huge variance. In Wandsworth the overall number of PCNs issued went down, the only borough where it did. There was industrial action by traffic wardens (CEOs) in 2022 and 2024 which it seems had quite the effect.

Go to the other end of the scale, Greenwich, where the number of parking PCNs trebled over a decade. That cannot be because people in Greenwich decided to become terrible at parking but because, possibly or probably, more controlled parking zones were introduced and more civil enforcement officers were deployed. One of Mr Mustard's readers in Greenwich may know. Greenwich Council may have become PCN crack addicts is also an option.

There were two big jumps in Greenwich, using 31 March as the year end.

From 2018 to 2019 from 38.342 to 68,195 and 

from 2024 to 2025 from 70,898 to 102,854

The end. Bus lane and moving traffic stats to follow.