What to know before you park
The fastest way to avoid parking tickets in Seattle is to treat the curb as a stack of restrictions: meters, permits, street cleaning, hydrants, driveways, loading zones, bus stops, crosswalk visibility, event rules, and temporary signs. The highest-risk situations are RPZ limits, paid parking areas, hospital/university demand, event traffic, hills, and ferry/transit-adjacent spillover.
Driver checklist
- Read every sign in the direction the arrows point.
- Leave legal clearance from hydrants, driveways, corners, crosswalks, ramps, and bus stops.
- Do not rely on another parked car as proof that the curb is legal.
- Photograph confusing signs before walking away if you may need to contest a ticket.
How this affects Seattle neighborhoods
In Seattle, the practical parking problem changes by destination. Areas like Capitol Hill, Ballard, Fremont may have very different curb behavior from Belltown, Queen Anne, South Lake Union. Start with the neighborhood page, then verify the specific block using posted signs and official city resources.
Where aSpot fits
aSpot is built as the planning layer between official rules and real-world driver behavior. Use it to save your car, compare likely pressure zones, and avoid wasting your first ten minutes circling the same obvious curb spaces.