A parking standoff in Seattle has gone viral after a driver repeatedly parked in a paid, private garage spot despite warnings from its rightful tenant. Ruby (@rawwruby), the frustrated tenant, documented a confrontation in a video that’s been viewed more than 20,000 times.
Finding a parking spot in Seattle‘s tightest neighborhoods has always been tough. According to the Seattle Department of Transportation (SDOT), the city manages curb parking as a constrained public resource, relying on strict time limits, meters, and Restricted Parking Zones (RPZs) to keep spaces moving.
For this reason, street parking comes at a high premium in the city. And many apartment residents choose to bypass the public curb entirely, paying expensive monthly fees for guaranteed, assigned stalls inside their building’s private garage.
A 2019 MyNorthwest report noted someone received a parking ticket in Seattle while paying for parking. A Reddit post headline reads, “Parking is insane in this city.” Someone responded, “Park where you are supposed to and pay for it. It would have cost you less than $1 to follow the laws.” But, as the viral video suggests, a paid spot doesn’t always guarantee peace of mind.
An alleged parking standoff goes viral
According to Ruby, she and her neighbor each pay $100 a month to secure their respective private places to park. Fed up with the recurring unauthorized usage, she parked her own vehicle directly behind the driver’s car. This effectively blocked him into the space so he could not leave without confronting her. “This is my garage. I live right here,” Ruby can be heard saying in the recording.
The confrontation escalated when, according to Ruby, the driver demanded she show legal proof that the spot belonged to her before he would move. In her caption, Ruby asserted that the man did not even reside in the building. She said he parks in her spot while visiting his girlfriend, who lives nearby.
Because the dispute happened within a private residential building rather than on a public city street, traditional municipal enforcement like SDOT or the Seattle Police Department Parking Enforcement Division cannot intervene. Instead, under Washington law, unauthorized vehicles on private residential property must be managed via a written impound authorization from the property owner or manager.
And paying tenants can’t just call a tow truck themselves. Washington State law also dictates that tow operators cannot legally remove a vehicle from private property without a signed authorization form from the actual property owner or manager at the time of the tow.
Published: Jun 5, 2026 06:00 pm