ARB Parking Analytics

Complete dataset analysis — every parking session, ticket, notice, and payment across all managed lots. 2.88M sessions, 225K tickets served, $6.4M collected.

Data Range Mar 2023 — Mar 2026
Total Sessions 2,881,004
Generated Mar 13, 2026
1 — Executive Summary
Total Sessions
2.88M
All parking sessions recorded
Tickets Served
225,139
Notices actually sent to owners
Tickets Paid
74,780
33.2% all-time conversion
Revenue Collected
$6.43M
Total across all lots
Tickets Flagged
324,896
~100K cancelled/held before sending
Avg Face Amount
$75.57
Median $85 (priced tickets only)
Avg Revenue / Paid
$85.97
Including surcharges & tax
Active Lots
25+
Across FL, CO, TX, MD, MS, DC
The funnel: Of every 100 parking sessions, about 8 get flagged for a violation, 5.5 get a notice actually sent, and 1.8 result in a paid ticket. The conversion engine works — the question is always "how do we widen the top and tighten the middle?"
2 — Growth Story

Monthly Session Volume

Total parking sessions recorded by the ALPR camera network. The massive ramp from mid-2024 reflects new lot onboarding and camera expansion.

Monthly Tickets Served

Notices actually sent to vehicle owners each month. This is the "real" ticket count — excludes cancelled, held, and unsent.

10x growth in 3 years. From ~400 tickets/month in early 2023 to 12,000–13,000/month by late 2025. Session volume exploded from ~5K/month to 240K/month — camera network is scaling fast.
3 — Conversion Funnel

Monthly Conversion Rate (% of Served Tickets Paid)

The percentage of served tickets that resulted in payment. Early months show high conversion on small volume (selection bias). Mature rate stabilizes at 31-35%.

Conversion has stabilized at ~33%. After the initial ramp (small lot, self-selecting payers), the rate settled into a 31–35% band through all of 2025. That's a healthy, predictable baseline. Recent months (Jan–Mar 2026) appear lower but are still maturing — they haven't had enough time for notices 2 and 3 to drive payment.

The Full Funnel — Sessions → Flagged → Served → Paid

Shows the entire pipeline: how many sessions become violations, how many get notices sent, and how many convert to payment.

4 — Revenue

Quarterly Revenue

Total dollars collected per quarter. Q1 2026 is partial (through mid-March).

QuarterPaid TicketsRevenueAvg / TicketQoQ Growth
2023 Q1101$5,852$57.94
2023 Q21,154$77,131$66.84+1218%
2023 Q32,274$160,749$70.69+108%
2023 Q42,468$193,224$78.29+20%
2024 Q14,241$340,691$80.33+76%
2024 Q24,688$391,622$83.54+15%
2024 Q35,023$393,920$78.43+1%
2024 Q48,867$712,534$80.36+81%
2025 Q110,737$892,934$83.17+25%
2025 Q29,045$788,160$87.14−12%
2025 Q39,667$878,132$90.84+11%
2025 Q410,725$1,050,371$97.93+20%
2026 Q1*5,790$543,157$93.81partial
Revenue per paid ticket is climbing. From ~$58 in early 2023 to $98 in Q4 2025 — a 69% increase in yield per collection. This reflects both higher face amounts on newer lots and better surcharge capture. Q4 2025 was the first $1M+ quarter.
5 — Cohort Analysis

The most important view: for tickets issued in each quarter, what percentage were paid within 30, 60, 90, and 120 days? This reveals collection velocity and predicts where immature cohorts will land.

Cohort Payment Curves by Quarter

Each line is a quarterly cohort. The y-axis shows cumulative % paid at each milestone. Recent quarters (Q4 2025, Q1 2026) are still maturing.

QuarterTickets30-Day60-Day90-Day120-DayFinal
2023 Q111984.9%84.9%84.9%84.9%84.9%
2023 Q22,56344.4%44.4%44.4%44.4%45.0%
2023 Q35,24042.7%42.7%42.7%42.7%43.4%
2023 Q46,37238.0%38.0%38.0%38.0%38.7%
2024 Q19,97440.8%41.0%41.5%41.7%42.5%
2024 Q213,03431.3%33.0%33.7%34.4%36.0%
2024 Q314,60232.5%33.3%33.6%33.7%34.4%
2024 Q427,24328.1%30.5%31.2%31.5%32.6%
2025 Q128,21323.8%33.6%35.4%35.9%38.1%
2025 Q227,85417.9%27.6%30.3%31.0%32.5%
2025 Q329,16318.0%26.8%30.8%32.1%33.2%
2025 Q432,56920.9%27.0%28.5%28.5%32.9%
2026 Q1*28,19310.3%10.3%10.3%10.3%20.5%
The 30-day dip is real but misleading. In 2023-2024, most payments happened within 30 days (30-day ≈ final). By 2025, the 30-day rate dropped to ~18-24%, but the 90-day and final rates held at 32-38%. This means the notice cadence shifted — more payments are coming on notices 2 and 3 rather than immediately. The system is still collecting; it's just taking longer per ticket.
Q1 2026 is only ~70 days old. At 20.5% final, it looks low, but based on historical curves it should land at 30-34% once the cohort matures past 120 days. Don't panic on this number yet.
6 — Notice Effectiveness

Conversion by Notice Count

What % of tickets convert based on how many notices were sent?

Ticket Volume by Notice Count

How many tickets ended up at each notice stage?

Notices SentTicketsPaidConversion% of All Tickets
1 notice64,29127,99643.5%28.6%
2 notices26,65513,31249.9%11.8%
3 notices66,01224,77437.5%29.3%
4 notices33,6845,25515.6%15.0%
5 notices27,6372,81910.2%12.3%
6+ notices6,8606249.1%3.0%
The sweet spot is 1–3 notices. Notices 1 and 2 have the highest conversion (44–50%). Notice 3 still pulls 37.5%. After that, conversion drops off a cliff — notice 4 is 15.6%, notice 5 is 10.2%. The cost of sending notices 4–6 needs to be weighed against the diminishing returns.
92.4% of all payments come by the 3rd notice. Only 7.6% of conversions happen at notice 4 or later. If sending a notice costs $2–5 in postage + DMV lookup, notices 4+ are marginally profitable at best.
7 — Lot Performance (Top 25)
LotNameTicketsPaidConv %RevenueAvg Face

Revenue vs Conversion by Lot

Bubble size = ticket volume. X-axis = conversion rate. Y-axis = revenue. Top-right = high volume, high conversion winners.

8 — Repeat Offenders

Plates by Ticket Count

How many unique plates have 1, 2, 3, or more tickets?

Conversion by Repeat Status

First-timers pay more often than repeat offenders.

BucketUnique PlatesTotal TicketsConversion
1 ticket132,650132,65041.0%
2 tickets14,23128,46235.3%
3 tickets4,18912,56730.1%
4–5 tickets2,89712,62323.8%
6–10 tickets1,76612,98716.9%
11+ tickets1,11125,8505.1%
1,111 plates have 11+ tickets each — totaling 25,850 tickets at 5.1% conversion. These chronic offenders represent 11.5% of all tickets but almost never pay. They may be delivery drivers, employees at nearby businesses, or scofflaws who've learned the system rarely escalates. This is the #1 revenue leakage bucket — a targeted strategy (boot, tow, or higher escalation) could unlock significant revenue.
9 — Geography

Tickets by State (Top 15)

Florida dominates, followed by Colorado and Maryland — reflecting where the lots are physically located.

StateTicketsPaidConversion
FL133,54545,78434.3%
CO24,8969,73639.1%
MD14,7654,90533.2%
TX9,4872,48726.2%
LA7,1001,59222.4%
MS6,1921,52124.6%
DC4,8451,49330.8%
KY4,1671,10026.4%
OH2,47060924.7%
GA2,21560227.2%
Colorado has the best conversion rate at 39.1% — 5 points above the average. Texas and Louisiana are the weakest at 22–26%. This could reflect DMV lookup quality (some states make it harder to get owner info), local legal enforcement culture, or lot-specific factors.
10 — Day of Week Patterns

Tickets & Conversion by Day of Week

Weekends generate more tickets (Saturday is #1) and have higher conversion rates.

Saturday is the biggest day (40,707 tickets, 36.4% conversion) and Sunday has the highest conversion (35.1%). Weekday tickets convert at 31–33%. Weekend parkers may be more casual / one-time visitors who are more responsive to notices.
11 — Legal Escalation
Tickets Reaching Legal (4th Notice)
26,102
11.6% of all served tickets
Legal Notice Conversion
3.2%
vs 37.2% for non-legal tickets
Revenue from Legal Notices
$84,454
Only 1.3% of total revenue
Revenue from Non-Legal
$6.34M
98.7% of total revenue
Legal escalation has almost zero ROI. 26,102 tickets reached the 4th (legal) notice. Only 834 paid (3.2%). At typical legal notice costs of $5–15 per notice, this stage costs $130K–390K to generate $84K in revenue. Unless the legal threat is improved (actual liens, collections reporting, or boot/tow), it's a money loser.
12 — Key Insights & Recommendations
1. The business is scaling. From $437K total revenue in 2023 to $3.6M in 2025 — an 8x increase. Q4 2025 broke $1M for the first time. Session volume suggests 2026 is tracking even higher.
2. Collection velocity is improving. Q1 2026 paid tickets averaged 20 days to payment (median 16) vs Q4 2025's 32 days (median 23). People are paying faster — likely reflecting better notice design, digital payment options, or more aggressive early follow-up.
3. The 3-notice rule. 92.4% of all payments come by the 3rd notice. Notices 4+ generate 7.6% of payments at significantly higher cost. Consider capping at 3 notices for most lots, reserving notice 4 only for high-value tickets.
4. Chronic offenders are a blind spot. 1,111 plates with 11+ tickets account for 25,850 tickets at 5.1% conversion. This is the single largest untapped revenue pool. Boot/tow programs, partnerships with property managers, or integration with state DMV scofflaw lists could be transformative.
5. Legal escalation needs a rethink. 3.2% conversion on 26K tickets is not working. Either invest in making the legal threat real (actual collections reporting, liens) or eliminate the cost of sending the 4th notice.
6. 65% of tickets have no face amount. Revenue analysis only covers ~35% of tickets with pricing. Fixing fee data capture would massively improve forecasting accuracy and potentially identify lots where fees aren't being set.
7. Geographic opportunity. Colorado converts at 39% vs the 33% average. Understanding why (better DMV data? different lot mix? notice design?) and applying those learnings to TX (26%), LA (22%), and MS (25%) could lift overall conversion by 2–3 points.
8. Weekend enforcement is the most profitable. Saturday and Sunday generate more tickets and convert better. Ensuring full camera coverage and enforcement capacity on weekends is the highest-ROI operational investment.