Downtown Raleigh drivers may want to savor their current parking deals while they still can. City staff have floated a sweeping overhaul of parking rates that would hike on-street meter prices and raise hourly and monthly garage fees across the core. The package, which could push some on-street meters up to $2.50 an hour and shrink the city’s two-hour free garage window, is meant to plug a multimillion-dollar hole in the city’s parking fund. City Council is expected to dig into the options during budget talks in June 2026.
What staff recommended
In a recent briefing, staff laid out three scenarios that would each bring in roughly $7.1 million to $7.4 million more per year in downtown parking revenue. Under the most aggressive option, on-street meter rates would climb to $2.50 an hour, a move projected to generate about $5,169,375 annually. Non-event garage parking would rise to about $3 per hour with a $21 all-day maximum, while event parking was modeled at around $4 per hour or $24 for the day.
The presentation also walked through increases to monthly permits, which could jump to $135 to $140, and potential extensions of enforcement hours in some areas. Staff showed versions that would cut back the two-hour free garage window and others that would keep parts of the pilot in place, according to the city’s presentation.
Why staff says the reset is necessary
According to staff, the math on downtown parking is getting increasingly ugly. The parking enterprise is staring at about $24.1 million in projected costs next year, with only $16.1 million in expected revenue. That roughly $8 million gap has been covered with general fund transfers and has delayed important maintenance and repairs.
Staff argued that higher curbside prices would push more long-term parkers into decks, free up street spaces more quickly, and bring in cash to take care of aging facilities and equipment, as reported by The News & Observer.
Business owners push back
Not everyone is thrilled about the idea of pricier meters and fewer freebies. Some council members and downtown business owners urged city leaders to move carefully, warning that aggressive rate hikes could nudge shoppers and diners toward suburban centers where parking is easier on the wallet…