The Road User Charging Schemes (Penalty Charges, Adjudication and Enforcement) (England) (Amendment) Regulations 2026
These Regulations amend the Road User Charging Schemes (Penalty Charges, Adjudication and Enforcement) (England) Regulations 2013 to modify how documents and penalty notices are served by mail.
The amendments remove the specific requirement for charging authorities to use first class post and establish new legal assumptions for when a document is deemed delivered: the fourth working day after posting for domestic mail and the tenth working day for international mail.
These changes apply to charging authorities in England and any persons or entities issued with documents under road user charging schemes.
Arguments For
The explanatory note states that the amendments permit usage of a wider range of postal services beyond first class post.
The document implies a standardization of delivery assumptions for different classes of mail by removing the 'first class' requirement.
The inclusion of a specific tenth-day delivery assumption for international post provides a formal legal timeline for service outside the United Kingdom where none was previously detailed in the specific subsections amended.
Arguments Against
Legal scholars or motorists might argue that removing the requirement for first class post may delay the receipt of penalty charge notices, potentially reducing the time available for recipients to respond or pay at discounted rates.
Affected parties might express concern that assuming delivery on the fourth working day for non-first-class post may not accurately reflect actual postal service performance, leading to legal disputes over whether a document was served.
Critics may question why a full impact assessment was not conducted, as the changes to service timelines could affect the procedural rights of individuals subject to charging schemes.
- -(1) These Regulations may be cited as the Road User Charging Schemes (Penalty Charges, Adjudication and Enforcement) (England) (Amendment) Regulations 2026.
- (2) These Regulations come into force on 7th September 2026.
This section establishes the official title of the legislation for citation purposes.
It also sets the effective date for these regulatory changes as 7th September 2026.
- -(1) The Road User Charging Schemes (Penalty Charges, Adjudication and Enforcement) (England) Regulations 2013 are amended in accordance with paragraph (2).
- (2) In regulation 3 (service of documents)-
- (a) in paragraph (1), in both places it occurs, omit 'first class';
- (b) after paragraph (4)(a), insert-
- '(aa) service of a notice or other document sent by post other than first class post to an address in the United Kingdom is to be taken to have been effected on the fourth working day after the day on which it was posted;';
- (c) in paragraph (4)(b)-
- (i) omit 'first class';
- (ii) for 'fifth' substitute 'tenth'.
This section modifies the 2013 Regulations by removing the mandate that postal service must be conducted specifically via first class mail.
It introduces a legal presumption that documents sent by methods other than first class post within the UK are received four working days after they are sent.
Furthermore, it increases the deemed delivery time for documents sent via post to addresses outside the United Kingdom from the fifth to the tenth working day after posting.
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