Newark Neighborhood Parking Guide

Fairmount parking: meters, signs, permits, and curb strategy.

A dense west-central neighborhood between Downtown, University Heights, and the West Ward, with residential pressure and corridor traffic.

Use this page as a practical planning guide, not a substitute for the curb. Parking rules are block-specific, temporary signs can override normal patterns, and the posted sign in front of the vehicle controls.

Where Fairmount parking gets tight.

  • Central Avenue, South Orange Avenue, Norfolk Street, 13th Avenue, and streets between University Heights and West Ward.
  • Campus-adjacent spillover, apartments, and local businesses can create steady curb turnover.
  • Sweeping rules, driveways, and narrow residential curbs are key checks.

Read the curb before you walk away.

Street sweeping

Newark sweeping is ward-based, so check the posted sign and whether the block follows an alternate-side cleaning day.

Meters and payment

If the block is metered, match the meter, pole, letter, arrow, or ParkMobile details before paying.

Ticket risk

Hydrants, driveways, temporary signs, loading zones, bus stops, and corners can create ticket risk even when a space looks open.

See live block scores
in the aSpot app.

The guide gives you the local context. aSpot helps you compare nearby blocks.

Download aSpot — Free on iOS

City parking rules to check before you park

Compare nearby Newark neighborhoods

Official sources for Newark parking rules

Use these official sources when a curb rule is confusing, high-stakes, or different from what drivers usually expect. aSpot can help you plan, but the posted sign and official city rules control the final parking decision.

Fairmount parking questions

Is street parking easy in Fairmount?

It depends on the exact block, time of day, posted signs, meter rules, permits, cleaning windows, and local demand. Always confirm the curb before walking away.

What should I check before parking in Fairmount?

Check the full sign stack, meter rules, permit signs, hydrants, crosswalks, bus stops, driveways, temporary signs, and the next street-cleaning or restriction window.

Can aSpot tell me whether a space is legal?

aSpot helps with parking intelligence and saved locations, but official posted curb signs control whether a space is legal.