You can continue to park in a metered spot in Oakland on Sundays without paying — at least for an extra month.
This morning, the city announced that it has extended a grace period before issuing Sunday parking citations until April 12, 2026. City officials had previously said they would begin issuing citations the first week of March. Oakland announced that it would extend parking payment to Sundays citywide last month, after a few years of requiring payment on that day only in limited areas.
A press release said the grace period extension is designed to give drivers “additional time to adjust to the change,” with parking enforcement technicians serving only warning notices for now.
The idea behind Sunday parking meter payments, according to the city, is to promote parking turnover. It will also likely help boost the city’s bottom line.
“This change will improve parking availability for everyone and provide better access to the spaces that make Oakland great,” said Josh Rowan, Oakland’s transportation department director, in a city press release.
The change is also being promoted as a way for businesses to get more people into their stores on heavy-traffic weekend days. “Without metering, drivers often leave their vehicles for an extended period of time, limiting access to high-demand areas for other people,” the city said.
This is the latest parking initiative in Oakland aimed at increasing parking availability and revenue.
Oakland has, in recent years, raised parking fees, added parking meters around Lake Merritt, and created flex parking to increase parking occupancy rates.
This development occurs as the transportation and finance departments battle over which agency will control parking management and administration.
On its parking tickets website, where people can pay for a ticket online, the city says the standard fine for an expired parking spot is $64, but many spaces in busy, popular areas come with higher fines, including near City Hall, where the same ticket costs $74.
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