Downtown Dallas Parking: Meters, Garages, and the Rules That Get Visitors Towed
Downtown Dallas parking for an everyday trip — not a game day — covering meters, garages, and Texas-specific rules that catch out-of-towners off guard.
Downtown Dallas parking is a different animal from the stadium and arena lots — this is about meters, garages, and the day-to-day rules for visiting Deep Ellum, the Arts District, Uptown, or downtown for business. As a major business and travel hub, Dallas garages and lots fill up during workdays, evenings, and weekends alike, so a little planning goes a long way — reserving a spot on SpotHero ahead of a busy day downtown is the easiest way to skip the circling.
Street meters
Dallas’s official mobile payment provider for meters is ParkMobile — enter the zone number posted at your space, your plate, and how long you need, and you can extend your session right from your phone without running back to feed a meter.
Garages and lots
City Hall Garage (1500 Marilla St.): $8 flat rate evenings and weekends
West End garages: $10–$15 for events — walkable to American Airlines Center, the Perot Museum, and Reunion Tower
Sundance Square garages (Fort Worth, if you’re making the trip): first 2 hours free with validation from a participating restaurant or shop
Pre-booking through SpotHero or ParkMobile can lock in a guaranteed spot in busy areas — Downtown, Deep Ellum, Uptown — instead of circling the block during peak hours.
Free parking after hours
Street parking is typically free after 6 PM and all day Sunday in most downtown areas — a good option if you’re heading out for dinner or a show on a weeknight and don’t want to deal with a garage.
Towing and ticket rules that catch visitors off guard
- No parking within 15 feet of a fire hydrant — even if the curb isn’t painted and there’s no sign
- No parking within 20 feet of an intersection or crosswalk, or 30 feet of a stop sign
- Never block a driveway, alley entrance, sidewalk, or ramp — even for a quick stop
- Vehicles parked on a city street for more than 24 consecutive hours can be reported and towed as abandoned
- Fire lanes are no-parking at all times, marked or not, and towing from them is common
These rules apply citywide, not just downtown — but density and tourist traffic make downtown, Deep Ellum, and Uptown the places visitors most often get caught out.
Parking by neighborhood
- Downtown / Main Street District: metered street parking plus garages; demand highest on weekday business hours
- Deep Ellum: check signage carefully — rate changes are rolling out on a different timeline here due to Commerce Street construction
- Uptown: high demand evenings and weekends; garages fill fast near restaurant rows
- Bishop Arts District: limited free residential-adjacent parking, often with permit requirements for non-residents — a paid lot is usually the simpler choice
Heads up: rates are due for another look
Dallas’s last citywide meter rate increase was in 2024, after rates had gone over a decade without changing. Deep Ellum’s rate adjustment was tied to a specific construction timeline. [Check back here for any new citywide rate announcements or Deep Ellum-specific updates as they’re confirmed.]
Need a guaranteed spot ahead of time: find downtown Dallas parking on SpotHero.
FAQ
Is downtown Dallas parking free on Sundays? Most metered street parking is, yes — along with major holidays.
What’s the easiest way to pay a meter? The ParkMobile app — no coins needed, and you can extend your session remotely.
Can I park overnight on a downtown street? Not for more than 24 consecutive hours — after that, your car can be reported and towed as abandoned.
Where’s the cheapest garage? City Hall Garage offers an $8 flat rate evenings and weekends — hard to beat for a dinner or evening event downtown.
Already got a ticket or got booted? See our Dallas parking tickets & towing guide for the dispute process. Heading to a game or show instead? Check our Dallas parking guide for venue-specific breakdowns.
This post contains affiliate links, including SpotHero. We may earn a commission if you book through them, at no extra cost to you. Rates and enforcement policies can change — verify current rates with the City of Dallas or ParkMobile before you go. Full details on our Affiliate Disclosure page.