A well-written RFP does two things: it forces vendors to respond on your terms instead of theirs, and it surfaces the differences between proposals that would otherwise be buried in fine print. Here's the complete structure.

The 7 Required Sections

Section 1: Property Overview

Give vendors the information they need to price accurately:

Section 2: Scope of Services

Be specific about what you want the vendor to handle. Common scope items:

Section 3: Fee Structure Requirements

Require vendors to respond with a specific fee structure. Do not let them respond with ranges. Ask for:

Section 4: Technology Requirements

Specify what technology you expect and who owns it:

Section 5: Staffing Requirements

Section 6: Reporting Requirements

Require monthly reports that include:

Section 7: Contract Terms

Require vendors to respond with their proposed contract terms, including:

The 3 Questions Most Owners Forget

1. Who owns the customer data?

Every transaction creates data — license plates, email addresses, payment history. Some parking management companies treat this data as their property and use it to market to your customers. Require in the RFP that all customer data is owned by the property owner and cannot be used by the vendor for any purpose outside of operating your lot.

2. What happens to equipment if you terminate?

If the vendor installs payment kiosks, gates, or LPR cameras, who owns that equipment? If you terminate the contract, can you keep the equipment or does the vendor remove it? This is a major negotiating point. Ideally, equipment purchased with your money stays on your property.

3. What is the termination penalty?

Many parking management contracts have early termination fees — sometimes equal to 3–6 months of management fees. Know this number before you sign. A 5-year contract with a $30,000 termination penalty is a very different commitment than a 5-year contract with a 90-day notice period.

RFP SectionWhy It Matters
Property OverviewAccurate pricing from vendors
Scope of ServicesApples-to-apples comparison
Fee StructureNo hidden costs
TechnologyData ownership and transparency
StaffingService level accountability
ReportingOngoing oversight
Contract TermsExit options and equipment rights
TPMA Recommendation: Send your RFP to at least three vendors. One response gives you no leverage. Two gives you a comparison. Three gives you a market.