He’s Been Stealing Parking From His Job Every Day For Months—And So Far, No One’s Noticed

At some point, we’ve all tried to outsmart the system in one way or another, but one Redditor took it to the next level. Working at a job where employees have to pay $10 a day for parking, he found a clever way to skip the fee and it’s been working for months.

By taking advantage of a hidden spot in the parking garage and a little creativity, he’s been able to avoid paying a single dime. But is this just a clever hack, or is he playing with fire? Let’s take a look at how this “free parking” game is unfolding.

A person has been stealing parking at work for months by hiding their car in a secluded spot to avoid paying the parking fee

He’s Been Stealing Parking From His Job Every Day For Months—And So Far, No One’s Noticed
not the actual photo

'I've been stealing parking from my work every day for months.'

My work charges $10/day for parking in the parking garage, which really adds up.

We are supposed to pay this out of our own pockets. But I don't pay.

I found a parking spot on the bottom floor of the garage that is all the way in the corner. It's dark there and quite well hidden.

Then I back my car into the spot, put it into neutral, and push it gently until it rests against the wall.

So the wall completely blocks my rear plate. And I have no front plate.

So the parking attendant, if they happen to walk all the way into that corner, cannot easily read my plate.

I see many of my coworkers complaining about the prices, or showing parking tickets they got because they forgot to pay that day.

But so far I have not gotten a ticket.

Eventually I will get a ticket I think, and at that point I will not pay it and just start taking public transportation to work

In this scenario, the original poster (OP) describes repeatedly avoiding paying for workplace parking fees by hiding their license plate in a remote corner of the garage so attendants can’t easily identify their vehicle.

OP knows coworkers pay the daily fee and later says they plan to start using public transport only after likely getting caught. While OP hasn’t been stopped yet, both ethical and behavioural research and workplace policy discussions help clarify why this is problematic.

First, actions like this fall into a category scholars and professionals describe as fraudulent behaviour, obtaining a benefit or avoiding an obligation through deception. In broad terms, fraud refers to avoiding a responsibility or gaining value through means of deception or misrepresentation.

This general definition includes behaviour where a person intentionally deceives to avoid paying a required fee or obligation. For example, fraud research describes fraud broadly as obtaining something of value or avoiding an obligation by means of deception or concealment.

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Psychologists also study why people commit fraud or deceptive acts. Research on the “Fraud Triangle”, a widely recognised framework, shows that fraudulent acts usually involve three elements: pressure, opportunity, and rationalization.

OP clearly has opportunity (weak enforcement in the parking garage) and rationalizes the behaviour as fair because the fee feels high. This psychological rationalization is a well‑documented part of why people engage in deceptive behaviour even when they know it’s wrong. It doesn’t make the act neutral; it explains why they feel okay doing it.

From the perspective of workplace conduct, behaviour that involves dishonesty or evading payment to a company is usually considered misconduct, especially if it involves deception.

In discussions about workplace parking fee policies, commentators note that when an employee deliberately evades payment through deception, such as hiding plates or manipulating identification systems, it can be treated under company discipline as dishonesty or fraud rather than merely forgetting to pay.

Employers can discipline such conduct including warnings, loss of privileges, or other sanctions, depending on internal policies and documented evidence of repeated misconduct. This kind of behaviour is often explicitly listed alongside other forms of fraudulent or deceptive actions employees can face discipline for.

Even though OP justifies skipping payment as “saving money,” skipping required fees through deception is different from an accidental violation. Intentional avoidance, particularly repeated over months, involves a conscious decision to mislead the system.

This is not simply forgetting to pay; it is actively concealing identity to prevent enforcement, which meets the basic criterion for deceptive avoidance.

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Social science research also notes that people often justify unethical or deceptive behaviour through rationalization, telling themselves it’s okay because no one is visibly harmed or because the fee seems excessive. This mental process is a recognized psychological factor in fraud and other dishonest acts.

In studies, individuals who rationalize their actions are more likely to engage repeatedly in unethical behaviour because their internal moral restraints are suppressed.

In summary, while OP may see their actions as a harmless way to avoid fees, both ethical reasoning and behavioural research classify deliberate avoidance through deception as wrongful conduct.

The workplace may consider this misconduct, and over time it can escalate into serious disciplinary issues. The psychology of fraud also explains why people justify such actions, even when they know it isn’t right.

Here’s the comments of Reddit users:

These commenters sympathized with the high cost of parking at work and supported the poster’s efforts to avoid paying

gr4one − The dedication of putting it in neutral, getting out and pushing it against the wall - every day - is to be commended.

I pray for the longevity of your scam.

Swimming-Still-4813 − Having to pay for parking to work a job is crazy! !!

amandajjohnson1313 − Paying to park at your job is wild. ...

Paying $10 a day is just gross. ... $50 a week I would be pushing mine too man. Keep up the good fight!

This group shared their own creative ways of avoiding parking fees

Immediate-Return7850 − My husband did something like this is college.

He found a way to park up against a retaining wall where the parking enforcement couldn’t see his plate.

He had a class with the window facing where his car was.

The angle it was parked also made it impossible to get a tow truck,

THEN one day the guy came with a mirror taped to pole and he managed to stick it between the car and wall & get his place.

My husband literally watched him and to be honest wasn’t even mad. It was like well played my dude…

Fyler1 − Fight the machine brother

GamingRichter − My college had a paid parking garage. The problem is they would sell out of available spots so I could not buy one.

Since there was never a time when everyone parked at the same time there were always empty spots.

Normally the garage was 25% empty even overnight. There were no assigned spots so it’s not like I was taking a specific persons spot.

I’d park my 4wd jeep in 4wd meaning a regular tow truck can’t tow it since all wheels are locked.

They would need a flat bed which could not fit in the garage. I was never registered with the school so they had no idea who I was from the...

I got a few tickets that I didn’t pay since they didn’t know who I was. We soon found out they only ticketed on Wednesdays.

So on Wednesdays me or one of my roommates would request a free one day visitor pass from campus security.

Sometimes we would do it Tuesday’s and say they were staying overnight to reduce suspicion.

So every week my car would have a visitor pass on it for Wednesday.

I then realized they almost never checked cars on the roof of the parking garage since almost no one parked up there.

So pretty much free parking on to roof. Al I all I got like 6 tickets over 2 years and never paid any.

Keep in mind I would have gladly paid for a spot if they would sell it to me lol.

That being said, I hate employers that charge their employees to park.

It’s basically them giving you a lower salary. So f__k um. You might get fired if they find out though.

These users expressed disbelief at the idea of employers charging employees for parking

[Reddit User] − $10 a DAY? !?! I have worked in Manhattan for a decade+

and I could get cheaper parking through any office I worked at than that (obviously subsidized by the company).

Hell, I worked at 261 madison and that was $150 a month - for Madison at 39th! I have zero issues with what you’re doing lol

UncommonHaste − This is the most American f__king post I've ever seen.

Your jobs parking garage, where employees have to park, is charging employees to park there. How is this not illegal? Lmao.

Comfortable-Pack-748 − This is some E4 Mafia level s__t right here and I am here for it.'

This group acknowledged the absurdity of expensive parking fees

mad3y0ul00k − $10 a day is crazy

Agitated_Mess3117 − I found a great way to save on airport parking at DFW.

Many years ago we figured out it was possible to park at the on airport property hotel in their garage

and when we returned we'd stop by the hotel to pick up our car and run into the front desk and ask for the ticket to be validated

as the hotel offered complimentary parking and would set our parking ticket to $0 when exiting DFW at the toll gates.

This arrangement worked extremely well for out friend group for a few years.

The hotel changed policies when DFW began updating their parking and no more free parking for us.

sempercliff − My wife works for a university and all the faculty have to buy a parking pass every semester just like the students do.

It’s something like $250 / semester.

These commenters shared funny and sneaky methods of parking for free

psjjjj6379 − OP if you do ever get caught make another post and link this one for reference

and if you never get caught make a post that says you left this job and they never knew! We wanna hear how this turns out lol

Similar_Leather_2994 − I used to follow someone to get into the vip parking at work, the second parking was 5-10min walk.

During winter especially because its an indoor parking. Drove behind a car very close and be quick before the gate close

humandivebar − i work at a university where they make us pay a yearly parking fee of $800.

i found a little side street that is technically part of a paid parking zone, but for whatever reason the parking police don’t ticket me for parking there.

i like to think the other people parking there also refuse to pay for parking, and the parking attendants recognize

that street as the unofficial “i’m only a staff member i don’t get paid enough for this s__t” zone.

So, what do you think? Is this a harmless hack, or is it just asking for trouble? Share your thoughts below!

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