The Council has scooped a fortune in fines from e-bike operators by impounding more than 2,600 hazardously parked bicycles since launching a pioneering borough-wide enforcement operation 18 months ago.
Dangerously abandoned bikes which posed immediate danger or significant disruption were seized in the Council’s attempt to preserve the accessibility and safety of pavements and roads. That action has generated £210,000 in fines that is already in the council’s bank.

A forest of impounded Lime bikes
Cllr Johnny Thalassites (Holland ward), Lead Member for Resident Services, Planning and Enforcement, said: “Rental e-bikes have an important role to play in helping Londoners get around, but that cannot come at the expense of safe, accessible streets.
“Our officers have done a fantastic job in removing 2,600 e-bikes, and it sends a very clear message – park in a bay, or we’ll take it away. If bikes are dumped across pavements, blocking crossings or creating a danger for residents and road users, we will take action.”
As one of the first boroughs to introduce parking bays in 2023 to tackle the issue, RBKC is home to 245 rental e-bike parking spaces, 185 of which are marked and 60 are virtual bays visible via provider apps.
During the recovery operation, rental operators were charged more than £210,000 in seizure, storage and release fees, with all income reinvested into the service to support on-going enforcement activity.
Rental e-bike operator Lime accounted for the majority of seized bikes. Here is the full breakdown of enforcement action since January 2025:
- 1,624 e-bikes from Lime
- 787 from Human Forest
- 61 from Voi
- 44 from Bolt
The total fees charged to each firm:
- £143,890.70 to Lime
- £58,017.35 to Human Forest
- £4,560.30 to Voi
- £3,630.35 to Bolt
Cllr Thalassites added: “We also need operators to do their bit by clearing obstructions quickly, covering the cost when we have to intervene, and doing more to encourage considerate rider behaviour.”
According to an agreement between operators and the Council, parked rental e-bikes which do not meet certain stipulations under section 149(2) of the Highways Act, or bikes parked outside of a bay, are to be reported to operators who then have upto six hours to remove it.

Enforcement action in progress


