MELBOURNE CONGESTION LEVY
The new area is not only larger than the initial “CBD” area, but includes areas that are simply non-commercially viable and will in turn effect paid parking areas, potentially converting them into free parking areas to simply avoid paying the levy. This certainly won’t kerb congestion, pollution or raise the expected revenue the government seeks from this new action.
The new Category 2 area will be levied at a “concessional” of $950 per space, while the levy on the current Category 1 spaces has already increased from $960 to $1,300 per space on 1st January 2014. These changes have a huge impact on the economic viability of not only the car parks imposed with the levy in these areas, but on commercial and retail business, as the cost of doing business will rise an estimated $1,300 per staff member P.A. and parking rates will need to be increased to support the new tax.
UPDATE 2016:
For the Category 1 area, the levy for each non-exempt parking space will increase from $1340 in 2015 to $1360 for 2016.
For the Category 2 area, the levy for each non-exempt parking space will increase from $950 in 2015 to $960 for 2016.
Adjusted levy amounts are released in November each year, indexed annually for CPI.
Congestion Levy UPDATE 2017:
Interestingly the congestion levy is meant to be index annually at the CPI rate and whilst the Category 1 area, increases from $1360 in 2016 to $1380 for 2017, the Category 2 area increased at a higher rate than the indexed CPI, from $960 in 2016 to $980 for 2017 and arguably should actually be around $970 to $975 per space.
Congestion Levy UPDATE 2017:
Interestingly the congestion levy is meant to be index annually at the CPI rate and whilst the Category 1 area, increases from $1360 in 2016 to $1380 for 2017, the Category 2 area increased at a higher rate than the indexed CPI, from $960 in 2016 to $980 for 2017 and arguably should actually be around $970 to $975 per space.
The Melbourne Congestion Levy Explained
The massive expansion of the levy in 2015 to include a Category 2 area was extreme and are a disproportionate fee for the areas. As can be seen from the graph below (provided by Parking & Traffic Consultants) that whilst Melbourne’s Category 1 area is below that of Sydney, Melbourne’s Category 2 area is far higher than Sydney’s $780 current levy (after 15 years).
Is the Congestion Levy really aimed to reduce traffic congestion in the Melbourne CBD and surrounding suburbs, reduce pollution and encourage greater public transport usage?
Currently, money collected by the Congestion Levy (parking tax) is placed into consolidated revenue for the State Government and is meant to be reinvested back into public transport infrastructure. However, there is no link between the revenue and investment in schemes to reduce traffic congestion through investment in walking, cycling and public transport or even sustainable transportation initiatives.
If the government was serious about even one of these goals, it would include on-street parking as a leviable parking space. However its sole focus is on that of off-street parking, which is counter to a recent statement by Minister for Roads, Terry Mulder, “Relocating on-street parking to off-street areas is an efficient way to relieve congestion” and he continued to state, “A single parked car on Punt Rd can reduce two lanes of traffic to one, causing congestion to spill into neighbouring areas.”
So, if on-street parking can cause such congestion, why would these parking spaces not fall under the levy?
The category 1 levy area
Category 1 levy area remains unchanged and is highlighted by the dark blue lines on the map, being bounded by Hoddle St, Punt Rd, Queens Rd, Kings Way, the West Gate Freeway, City Link, Footscray Rd, Dudley St, Peel St, Queensberry St, Rathdowne St, Carlton St, Nicholson St, Gertrude St and Langridge St.
The category 2 levy area
Category 2 levy area is the new and highly contentious area bounded by the light blue lines on the map. These areas are divided into two, north and south of the existing category 1 area.
The are encompasses:
- North – Carlton, Fitzroy, Collingwood, Parkville, Carlton North, Fitzroy North, Princess Hill, North Melbourne and Residential West Melbourne.
- East – Abbotsford
- South – South Melbourne, Port Melbourne, Albert Park and St Kilda
- West – Commercial West Melbourne and Kensington
Detailed explanation:
The south category 2 levy area extends all the way to the St Kilda foreshore and Port Phillip Bay, bounded on the east by Hoddle St/Punt Rd/Nepean Hwy, Barkly St and to the west Princes St, Station St, Boundary St to the West Gate Freeway/Citylink.
The north category 2 levy area extends right into Brunswick East at Dawson St/Glenlyon Rd. It is bounded to the east by Merri Creek, Yarra River, Gipps St and Hoddle St and on the west by Citylink, then out into Flemington along Racecourse Rd to follow the Maribyrnong River and then the Yarra River back to area 1.
Congestion Levy Exemptions
Previously the congestion levy provided concessions of 25% and exceptions on spaces such as short-term parking, however these have been removed in the recent announcement and the following now applies:
The Levy generally applies to all non-residential off-street parking spaces with the following spaces broadly exempt from the levy:
- Residential and residential visitor parking spaces
- Designated disabled parking spaces
- Parking spaces provided free of charge by local councils, religious bodies, hospitals, charitable institutions, universities, museums and libraries
- Parking spaces provided free of charge for visitors, clients, patients or
consultants - Paid parking spaces provided by a hospital for the exclusive use of its
patients and visitors - Overnight fleet vehicle parking
- Car sales display space, car service spaces or car hire spaces
- Parking for emergency vehicles
- Parking for shift workers for business that operate 24 hours per day
- Consular parking spaces
- Parking for maintenance services and loading bays.
For more information or assistance with your congestion levy liabilities, please contact Ace Parking +61 3 9886 0549
SRO Free Information Webinars
The State Revenue Office’s Customer Education Unit conducted free online webinars on 21st October and 6th- 20th November (Monday, Tuesday and Thursday’s) 2014 to explain the recent legislative changes to the congestion levy and the impact it will have to car park owners. The webinar sessions have now finished.
What the webinars covered?
A comprehensive and interactive webinar covering the recent legislative amendments to the Congestion Levy Act 2005 and the impact on car parks in the Category 2 levy area. Some of the topics covered in the webinar are:
- Letters issued by the SRO
- Congestion Levy – Overview
- Where is the new levy area?
- Which spaces are leviable?
- Who is liable?
- How much is the levy and how is it charged?
- Administrative processes
- Q&A Session
Attendees were able interact with the presenters by typing questions and comments, which the presenters answered during the webinar and a link to the notes supplied to all registrants via email in the lead up to the webinar.
Congestion Levy Letter from State Revenue Office
By now, most owners of any land/premises/building that has any form of parking, should have received a letter from the State Revenue Office outlining:
- implications of the congestion levy
- expansion of the levy boundaries
- important dates
- information on their free webinars
- what you need to do next
You can view a sample copy of the SRO Congestion Levy letter here.
What if you haven’t had any correspondence from the SRO?
If you are within the congestion levy area and have a parking space (even if you are exempt), it is our recommendation that you contact the SRO – cgl@sro.vic.gov.au
Other Useful Links
State Revenue Office – New Congestion Levy Area dedicated site page.
A full and detailed boundary list can be found on the State Revenue Office Victoria website, this link also provides an interactive map.
A full copy of Parking & Traffic Consultants, ‘Congestion Levy Update’, April 2014 can be found here
News Articles
St Kilda Sea Baths considers offering free parking to avoid the congestion levy – The Age, 23rd February 2015 – Online Article
The baths’ management has warned the levy could result in more congestion and driving if businesses decide to make their paid parking spaces free.
Until last week, state schools in many inner suburbs were subject to the levy. But the Victorian government ordered the Education Department to foot the bill instead.
The RACV general manager of public policy, Brian Negus said the levy was ineffective. “This is just a further tax on top of the motoring taxes that everyone pays,” he said.
Sick Parking Pain – Herald Sun, 21st November 2014 – Original Article – Online Article
This article discusses how the city’s 12 key medical facilities collected $70 million from charging patients and their often traumatised families to park in 2013-14, lifting the state’s unofficial annual hospital co-payment by $7.2 million, with hospital car park revenues rising 55% in 4 years.
Whilst not all of these car parks are in the levy area, for those that are, we pose the question – So why are hospitals exempt from the Congestion Levy, when they are creating congestion and clearly running a profitable car park facility? Our only concern would be patients paying more.
Councils call for parking congestion levy to be returned to councils – Herald Sun, 27th October 2014 – Online Article
The Municipal Association of Victoria asks the State Government to give back 15% of the money raised from the levy, which was introduced for the City of Melbourne in 2005. Yarra, Moreland, Port Phillip, Darebin and some parts of Moonee Valley are to be incorporated in the levy area from next year. Council have “grave concerns” about the impacts the extended congestion levy could have on community life, says Yarra Mayor Jackie Fristacky.
Melbourne advised to impose congestion toll to cut traffic – Herald Sun, 2nd June 2014 – Online Article
An alternate to the existing congestion levy is proposed in this article through an additional fee to toll road charges.
Car parking costs in Melbourne CBD soar with more increases on the way – Herald Sun, 10th September 2013 – Online Article
The effects on commercial parking prices and what it means to motorists.
Congestion Levy fails to solve traffic gridlock, researchers say – Herald Sun, 16th August 2012 – Online Article
Discussing how much we have paid since the inception of the levy and how the system is not transparent it is open to rorting by governments that may be spending the money on other inappropriate initiatives.
References and Resources
Property Council of Australia – Victoria Division – Articles on the Car Park Tax (Congestion Levy)
Urbis – Parking tax hike to harm Melbourne CBD retailers and business – Full article – Urbis Think Tank