Tauranga City Council will be taking a staged approach to parking changes at the Mount following public feedback.
In a statement this week, council said people from across Tauranga have come out strongly with their views on parking at the Mount and their feedback is helping to shape what happens next.
More than 2000 people shared their thoughts through an online survey and at in-person events during Tauranga City Council’s “Help shape Mount parking” engagement in July this year.
At the in-person events, staff acknowledged parking is a challenging issue as people want different things, and the Mount gets especially busy over summer and during events.
Responses through the survey were varied: 770 people said they didn’t want paid parking, while 1341 recognised there are problems and want better parking options.
The council agreed to the staged approach at a meeting last week.
This will start with additional time restrictions on Victoria Rd, Marine Parade and The Mall, as well as increased parking enforcement.
The bylaw for Salisbury Avenue and The Mall will also be updated to support cruise ship tour operator traffic management.
Staff will now prepare a detailed plan for how these initiatives could be rolled out, which will come back to the council for review.
Following a long campaign, and a presentation by Miro St residents to the City Delivery Committee earlier this month, the council also gave staff the green light to gather feedback from residents and businesses on the Miro St one-way proposal.
This proposal includes creating more on-street spaces to help ease parking pressure in the area.
Looking ahead, the council confirmed the development of a Mount Maunganui Parking Management Plan that will outline the strategic direction of parking at the Mount.
Options include angled parking on The Mall, paid parking at council-owned off-street carparks, a new off-street carpark near Coronation Park, and a business plan to support financially sustainable, paid parking at the Mount.
Deputy Mayor and Mauao/Mount Maunganui ward councillor Jen Scoular said the community’s input was invaluable.
“It’s clear there are quite different views from people around the city, but it’s a real challenge because there isn’t a lot of space. I’ll add that biking is a great option around the Mount and certainly helps with the parking issue.
“I’m also really pleased that options for Miro Street are being explored with residents and businesses using that street. I hope we can make a real difference to how that street works – for parking, for safety, and for everyone who uses it.”



8 comments
The Mount
Posted on 24-09-2025 18:54 | By PJ-Bethlehem
As a local (local WBP resident of 20 yrs) having a morning Sunday breakfast at the strip opposite the beach was a treat. Ahhhhhh the Deckchair, newspaper, coffee, eggs Bene....
Now, forget it..... not interested.
Council revenue hot shots.... "what can we generate" ..... who cares what the public think or want....
HA HA HA
Posted on 24-09-2025 20:05 | By Yadick
Tauranga City Council will be taking a staged approach to parking changes at the Mount following public feedback.
You know, just like they've done in Tauranga CBD. A staged approach to destruction.
TCC - keep your utter stupidity to yourself. You've absolutely killed Tauranga CBD. We do not in any way need your input into the Mount. Yes, parking is at a premium but that's what happens at a world class location.
For you to interfere here would be criminal and wrong in every way possible.
GET OUT AND LEAVE IT ALONE.
My anger at you boileth over.
WELL !
Posted on 24-09-2025 21:20 | By The Caveman
The Tauranga CC have "bug__red" the downtown Tga area, and now they are starting on the Mount CBD !!! God help the business owners in the Mount CBD!!
Interpretation
Posted on 25-09-2025 08:30 | By Kancho
Seems to me the figures are an interpretation of the survey they misleading . " 770 people said they didn’t want paid parking, while 1341 recognised there are problems and want better parking options. Surely 1341 aren't saying they want paid parking but they want better options . But those supposed options are only nebulous or not practical ? Sure if the question is what would you like to see then I want to be taller or be able to park anywhere any time. So the law of averages
Parking not that bad really
Posted on 25-09-2025 08:35 | By Womby
I recently went down to the main shopping centre and found a park near to the main street. The parking was easily accessible and the time limit was reasonable. What a joy and difference to the Tauranga CBD!
And the place was busy, lots of people were walking around. Not one person in the concrete park that was once a parking area on the main strip but that mistake was made a few years ago despite public opinion being against it.
Driving around by the main beach it seemed to me that perhaps there could be a different style somehow for parking spots but I don't know how it could be done.
But keep paid parking ala Tauranga away, the Mount is a totally different place, unique in Nz in my opinion. Please don't kill it off.
And I don't live there despite being a very long term Tauranga resident.
Parking not that bad really
Posted on 25-09-2025 08:35 | By Womby
I recently went down to the main shopping centre and found a park near to the main street. The parking was easily accessible and the time limit was reasonable. What a joy and difference to the Tauranga CBD!
And the place was busy, lots of people were walking around. Not one person in the concrete park that was once a parking area on the main strip but that mistake was made a few years ago despite public opinion being against it.
Driving around by the main beach it seemed to me that perhaps there could be a different style somehow for parking spots but I don't know how it could be done.
But keep paid parking ala Tauranga away, the Mount is a totally different place, unique in Nz in my opinion. Please don't kill it off.
And I don't live there despite being a very long term Tauranga resident.
Killing off the Mount too
Posted on 25-09-2025 15:43 | By Fernhill22
These council surveys are completely swayed by the wording of the questions to provide a desired outcome.
If these changes come into effect it's going to kill off the Mount in the same way it has TGA CBD. The Mount is an iconic holiday destination that people want to come to & we should be encouraging this to help bring in extra income into our local economy.
Rather than going after parking revenue, there's plenty of other ways TCC can save money-
Reduce headcount in TCC-Example being, reduce headcount I.e. 10 employees on salaries of $100k=$1m in savings. Don't pay for coffees for employees=saving $500k, stop paying contractors ridiculous amounts of money =unlimited, cut back costs of Civic Precinct $10m/$20m+.
TCC need to start cutting back their costs & expenditure on unwanted projects. The feeling on the street is, why are TCC so intent on ruining Tauranga/ Mount Maunganui
DON'T DO IT!!!
Posted on 27-09-2025 15:09 | By morepork
Never mind the "options".
Have you learned nothing?
1. For the Mount to remain a lively, buzzing centre of commerce and tourism it needs (small) businesses.
2. Small businesses need traffic (foot, people walking by...)
3. People walking by, need cars because our bus services are laughable, with the wrong buses for our roads and an obsolete approach to what should be a fully computerized/AI scheduling service. (Been to Hong Kong lately?)
4. Parking meters actually cost the community far more than they generate, because they stifle the flow of traffic to the area. That means small businesses go broke. The joy drains out of the community and people don't go there. (Take a stroll down Devonport road... It never used to be that way.)
If there is not enough parking spaces for people employed there all day, build more parking facilities, but leave road parking FREE.
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