Can we manage visitor spots separately from private spots?
Yes. You manage visitor and common spots at the building level. Private spot owners manage their own - with their own rules, availability, and earning potential if they choose.
One dashboard for every spot in your building. Clear rules. Real-time availability. A complete log when something goes wrong.
Visitor spots, common areas, rules, members - all managed from one dashboard. No more hunting through chat history.
Set time limits, approval requirements, and access rules per spot. When everyone can see the rules, fewer people break them.
Every reservation is timestamped. Every request is logged. When a neighbor says 'that wasn't me,' you have the evidence.
Set up your association with basic rules.
Define common and visitor parking areas.
Members join via link and can access real-time availability.
Messages get lost. Rules get forgotten. New residents don't know the system. And when a dispute happens, nobody has proof of anything. Parkyvo replaces the chaos with a single source of truth - visible to everyone, managed by the administrator.
Create your building's community, invite residents with a single link, set your parking rules. Most buildings are fully set up within an hour.
Yes. You manage visitor and common spots at the building level. Private spot owners manage their own - with their own rules, availability, and earning potential if they choose.
Yes. Parkyvo is built for European residential communities. Personal data is protected - residents only see availability and rules, not each other's personal information. Admins control what's visible.
Parkyvo gives you the evidence - timestamped logs, incident reports, and a full activity history. What you do with that evidence is your decision, but you'll never again be in a dispute with no proof.
Yes. Different spots, different rules, different approval flows. A visitor gets 2 hours maximum. A resident can book recurring daily. You define it once and Parkyvo enforces it.
Parkyvo doesn't change your building's rules. It makes them impossible to ignore.