'It costs us £1,400 to park on our own property'

Mr Morgan, who has lived in the property since 2012, described the bill as like a second council tax
Image caption,

Greg Morgan paid almost £1,400 last year for car parking at the rear of his home

  • Published

Homeowners found they were being billed £1,400 to park in the spaces that came with their own houses.

Residents of Tavington Road and Applewood Grove in Halewood, Merseyside, said while their homes were freehold, their parking spaces were leased and managed by a company called FirstPort.

One homeowner has to pay £370 a year just to drive up a 100ft (300m) service road to park on his own driveway.

The company told the BBC some "additional fees were mistakenly charged", but the residents said they were unconvinced by the firm's claim they would be given "credit notes" for the extra fees paid.

On Land Registry documents the car park is listed as leasehold, while the surrounding houses are all freehold Image source, Google
Image caption,

The small car park is accessed from Tavington Road in Halewood, Liverpool

The residents paid about £300 for "maintenance" of their parking spaces, but this has more than quadrupled.

Greg Morgan, 39, said: "We've all asked repeatedly for copies of the audited accounts to see what the money is being spent on, and we keep getting fobbed off.

"It's got to the point now where I'm paying this company as much as two additional mortgage payments a year, people are thinking of selling and leaving here."

Some of the residents said they were also being charged for the cost of running a block of flats nearby, even though none of them lived in it.

Letters seen by the BBC showed bills for cleaning, maintaining gates and fire safety equipment, carpets and even terrorism insurance for the flats, Applewood Court.

The homeowners said they had also received letters warning them about leaving bikes in the hallways.

Scott Traynor, 48, said: "The problem is quite clear, they're treating the freehold homes and the leasehold block of flats as the same development, but they're not."

FirstPort say fees go towards the maintenance of the car parkImage source, Google
Image caption,

Residents like Scott Traynor access their driveways via a small service road off Tavington Road

Applewood Grove resident Mr Traynor said the price he paid for using the service road to get to his own driveway had gone up from £250 in 2007 to about £370 now.

He said: "What bothers us all is that we keep getting additional charges and when you ask for details they talk about Applewood Court, which is a separate block of flats."

Linda Eccleston, who has lived on Tavington Road for last 18 years, said: "If all the additional fees we've paid are for that small car park, I want to know exactly what has been done to warrant those increases.

"I've asked repeatedly for meetings with the site manager, but he hasn't turned up."

Mrs Eccleston has lived at the property for almost 20 years
Image caption,

Linda Eccleston said she had tried and failed to arrange several meetings with FirstPort's local site manager

Graham Perrins, 58, who lives next door to Mr Morgan on Tavington Road, said: "It's got to the point where I've had the conversation with my wife about selling up.

"It drives me to despair because I don't know what bill I'm going to expect each year.

"I don't know what I'm actually paying for, and I can't get hold of anyone to explain properly."

The residents said they were now investigating whether they could raise the money to buy the parking area and operate it themselves.

FirstPort told the BBC it managed the homes on Tavington Road, Applewood Grove and the block of flats, Applewood Court, as one development.

But it said homeowners "only contributed to cover the general maintenance and insurance of the estate, such as the car park, not any costs associated with the management of the apartment block".

Mr Perrins believes the homeowners are being billed for maintenance costs associated with a block of flats
Image caption,

Graham Perrins said he "loved" his home but the charges have forced him to consider moving

FirstPort said fee increases in recent years had been due to rises in the real estate insurance market but said prices were starting to come down now.

It added: "This will be reflected in the service charge invoice for the year ending March 2025."

The firm said the large additional fees reported by homeowners last year were due to "human error".

"This was an isolated occurrence, which is now being rectified," the spokesman said.

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