A Dart Charge Penalty Charge Notice is a proper statutory PCN — not a private car-park ticket — so it has a clear, legally-defined appeal process, and a genuinely independent tribunal at the end of it. This guide explains the £70 fine and how it escalates, when you should simply pay, the valid grounds for a challenge, the first-timer grace period, and how to take it to the Traffic Penalty Tribunal if Dart Charge rejects you. It’s general information, not legal advice.
Key takeaways
- The fine: £70, reduced to £35 within 14 days, up to £105 after 28 days, then court and bailiffs.
- First PCN ever for a vehicle? You’re usually offered a grace period to pay just the toll.
- Appeal to Dart Charge within 28 days; if rejected, escalate free to the Traffic Penalty Tribunal.
- Valid grounds: already paid, sold/stolen, crossed in free hours, plate misread, duplicate.
- “I forgot” is not a valid ground — if you genuinely didn’t pay, pay promptly for the reduced rate.
01 / FINEThe fine, and how it escalates
Miss the payment deadline and you get a £70 PCN. Pay within 14 days and it’s halved to £35. Ignore it and after 28 days a Charge Certificate pushes it to £105; beyond that it can be registered as a debt at the Traffic Enforcement Centre (Northampton County Court), leading to an Order for Recovery, bailiffs and potentially a County Court Judgment that harms your credit. In short: don’t ignore it — either pay or appeal.
02 / GRACEThe first-timer grace period
If it’s the first PCN ever for that vehicle, Dart Charge usually lets you pay just the original toll within 14 days and cancels the fine. It’s a genuine concession — but it applies once per vehicle. After you’ve used it, the next forgotten payment sticks.
03 / GROUNDSValid grounds to appeal
Appeal when there’s a real error, not just because it’s annoying. Grounds that can succeed include: you already paid (keep proof); the vehicle was sold, stolen or not in your possession; you crossed in the free 10pm–6am window; the number plate was misread by the ANPR cameras; the vehicle is exempt (e.g. disabled-class); or it’s a duplicate for one crossing. Plate misreads and payment/account errors — especially around the 2023 operator change — have been among the most common genuine reasons PCNs get cancelled. “I didn’t know about the charge” or “I forgot” are not valid grounds.
04 / PROCESSHow to appeal — step by step
Make a formal representation to Dart Charge within 28 days, using the slip or online form on your PCN, with evidence (payment receipt, photos, dates). If they reject it, they issue a Notice of Rejection — and you then have the right to appeal free to the Traffic Penalty Tribunal, an independent adjudicator. Once you’ve reached the Charge Certificate or debt-registration stage you generally lose the right to make representations, so act within the windows.
05 / AVOIDNever deal with it again
The permanent fix is to remove the chance of forgetting: set up a Dart Charge account with autopay, register for the residents’ scheme if you qualify, or book a fixed-fare transfer that includes the crossing charge so the driver handles it. As a Dartford-based, TfL-licensed operator, Rushxo takes the Dart Charge off your plate entirely on airport runs.
FAQFrequently asked questions
How do I appeal a Dart Charge PCN?
Make a formal representation to Dart Charge within 28 days, with evidence. If they reject it and issue a Notice of Rejection, you can appeal free to the independent Traffic Penalty Tribunal. Act within the windows — once it reaches a Charge Certificate or debt registration, you lose the right to make representations.
What are valid grounds to appeal a Dartford Crossing fine?
You already paid, the vehicle was sold or stolen, you crossed in the free 10pm–6am window, the plate was misread, the vehicle is exempt, or it’s a duplicate for one crossing. “I forgot” or “I didn’t know” are not valid grounds.
Is there a grace period for a first Dart Charge fine?
Usually yes — the first time a vehicle ever gets a PCN, Dart Charge typically lets you pay just the toll within 14 days and cancels the fine. It only applies once per vehicle.
How much is a Dart Charge fine and how does it grow?
£70, reduced to £35 if paid within 14 days. Ignore it and after 28 days it rises to £105 via a Charge Certificate, then debt registration at the county court, bailiffs and possibly a CCJ.
Where do Dart Charge appeals go?
To Dart Charge first, then — if rejected — to the Traffic Penalty Tribunal, a statutory independent adjudicator. That’s different from the POPLA route used for private car-park charges.
What’s the most common reason Dart Charge PCNs get cancelled?
Genuine errors — particularly ANPR number-plate misreads and payment or account problems (which spiked around the 2023 operator change). Tens of thousands were cancelled in a single year for such errors.
Should I pay or appeal?
If you genuinely didn’t pay, pay promptly for the reduced rate. Appeal only if there’s a real error. This is general information, not legal advice — if a lot is at stake, take proper advice.
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