Parking Enforcement Jobs in Nashville: Get Paid Per Tag
By Tylar Miller, Founder of Taggr
Most articles about parking enforcement jobs in Nashville hand you a list of W-2 listings and call it a day. This guide covers those — but the fastest way to earn money in Nashville parking enforcement does not involve a uniform, a shift schedule, or an HR interview.
By the end of this post, you will know what Nashville parking enforcement pays across both tracks, how the gig-economy version works through Taggr, and exactly what it takes to start this week. For context on how parking enforcement compares to other Nashville side hustles, see our Nashville side hustles guide.
Key Takeaways
Traditional W-2 parking enforcement jobs in Nashville (Metro Nashville, LAZ Parking, ABM) pay $15–$22 per hour with fixed shifts, uniforms, and a hiring process that typically runs 2–4 weeks.
Taggr is the 1099 alternative — work your own hours, scan plates with your phone, and earn up to $25 per tire tag and up to $5 per paper notice, paid every Wednesday.
Active Nashville Taggrs average $25–$65 per hour depending on lot density, time of day, and pace. Weekly earnings of $1,000 or more are possible for high-effort weeks.
No uniform, no certification, no law enforcement background required. A smartphone, a reliable vehicle, and a passed background check are all you need.
Taggr is live in Nashville right now. Same-day starts are possible after your background check clears. No waitlist.
Parking Enforcement Jobs in Nashville: What’s Actually Available Right Now
Nashville has two distinct lanes for parking enforcement work. Both are real. Neither is better in every situation — they serve different needs.
The W-2 lane includes employers like Metro Nashville Government, LAZ Parking, Premier Parking, and ABM. These are traditional jobs with applications, training periods, fixed shifts, and bi-weekly paychecks. The typical rate runs $15–$22 per hour based on aggregator data from Indeed and ZipRecruiter. You get stability and, depending on the employer, benefits. The trade-off: you work their hours, in their uniform, at the lots they assign you.
The 1099 lane is where Taggr operates. Same enforcement work — scanning plates, flagging violations, issuing notices — but without a fixed schedule, a dress code, or a weeks-long hiring process. You work when you want, within contracted lots, and you get paid per result, not per hour on the clock. For a broader comparison of how this model plays out in another active market, see our parking enforcement jobs Houston guide.
Neither track requires a law enforcement background. The barrier to entry is low across the board. The core difference is flexibility versus structure. For people in Nashville already driving for DoorDash, Uber, or Instacart, flexibility is usually the whole point.
Traditional Parking Enforcement vs. Gig Parking Enforcement
Here is the direct comparison between the W-2 track and Taggr as a 1099 contractor.
On pay structure: W-2 roles pay $15–$22 per hour as a fixed wage; Taggr pays up to $25 per tire tag and up to $5 per paper notice. On average effective hourly: W-2 runs $15–$22 per hour; Taggr contractors average $25–$65 per hour during active enforcement. On schedule: W-2 shifts are assigned by the employer; Taggr is 100% flexible on your hours. On pay frequency: W-2 is typically bi-weekly; Taggr pays every Wednesday. On uniform: required for W-2, not required for Taggr. On certification: sometimes required for W-2, none for Taggr. On hiring timeline: 2–4 weeks for W-2, same-day start possible for Taggr. On tax form: W-2 employees get a W-2, Taggr contractors receive a 1099. On benefits: W-2 often includes benefits eligibility, Taggr contractors are independent and receive none. On vehicle: sometimes provided for W-2, your own required for Taggr. W-2 has a direct supervisor, Taggr does not.
W-2 roles have real advantages — predictable income, potential benefits, and an employer handling equipment and assignments. If you need stability and benefits, Metro Nashville or LAZ is a legitimate path worth pursuing.
Taggr is the right call when flexibility matters more than predictability. You control the hours. The pay-per-result model means a productive hour pays significantly more than a slow one. For a full breakdown of how Taggr’s pay structure works per shift, see how much you can make with Taggr.
These are not mutually exclusive. Some Nashville Taggrs work a W-2 job during the week and run Taggr shifts on nights and weekends. There is no conflict.
Apply at Taggr — fill out the application, pass the background check, and you can be scanning your first Nashville lot within days. Available in 58+ cities. No experience required.
How Taggr Works in Nashville
The workflow is simpler than most people expect.
Step 1: Open the Taggr app. Find available contracted lots near you. Takes about 2 minutes.
Step 2: Drive to the lot. Navigate to an apartment complex, retail lot, or event venue.
Step 3: Scan plates. Walk the lot and scan license plates with your phone. Time varies by lot size.
Step 4: Flag violations. The app instantly identifies unregistered vehicles, expired permits, and violations.
Step 5: Issue notice. Apply a tire tag (up to $25) or paper notice (up to $5). Takes under 5 minutes.
Step 6: Move to next lot. Close out and drive to your next assignment. Entirely your call.
Step 7: Get paid. Earnings deposit every Wednesday automatically.
Taggr operates across Nashville’s private lot network — apartment complexes in Germantown and The Gulch, retail centers along Charlotte Pike, and event-adjacent lots near Bridgestone Arena and Nissan Stadium. The app shows you what is contracted and available. You decide what is worth your time.
How Much You Can Actually Make With Parking Enforcement Jobs in Nashville
The honest range for actively working Taggrs is $25–$65 per hour. That range reflects real performance levels, not a floor and ceiling chosen to sound impressive.
Here is the math at different tag rates. On a high-density lot working tire tags only, at approximately two tags per hour at up to $25 per tag, estimated hourly is $50–$65.
On a lower-density lot working paper notices only, at 8–12 notices per hour at up to $5 each, estimated hourly is $40–$60. On a typical mixed-enforcement shift, earnings average $25–$65. On a slow lot with low volume, earnings typically land $25–$35 per hour.
Weekly potential: Taggrs working consistent, high-effort hours can clear $1,000 or more in a week. That is potential, not a guarantee. Results depend on hours worked and which lots you are running.
What drives earnings up in Nashville:
Overnight enforcement in apartment lots — unregistered vehicles accumulate overnight in dense complexes, so volume tends to be highest here.
Event nights — Bridgestone Arena and Nissan Stadium shows create surge windows in lots around downtown and Midtown.
Weekday mornings — high-turnover retail lots can move fast before the mid-morning lull.
Realistic expectations: your first few shifts will run slower while you learn lot layouts and the app’s rhythm. Most Taggrs find their stride by week two. Earnings variance is real — some hours hit $60 or more, some land at $25. Plan accordingly.
Taggr vs. delivery apps: gig delivery workers typically see a larger gap between gross earnings and net take-home due to high mileage. Taggr does not eliminate vehicle costs, but you are driving between nearby lots — not across the city for a low-value order. For more on this, see our guide to making money with your car without driving more.
Individual results vary based on hours worked, lot availability, market conditions, and personal effort. Taggr does not guarantee specific earnings.
Why Nashville Is a Strong Market for Parking Enforcement Jobs
Nashville’s parking enforcement demand has been building for years. Private-lot enforcement has not kept pace. That gap is where the opportunity sits.
Broadway and tourism volume: Nashville’s Lower Broadway draws millions of visitors annually. That traffic overwhelms paid lots and pushes overflow into private lots that are not regularly enforced — creating contract demand.
Apartment density: Nashville’s post-2020 construction boom produced thousands of new apartment units. Nearly all have private lots that require active enforcement. Every new complex is a potential contracted lot.
Event surge nights: Bridgestone Arena, Nissan Stadium, and Ascend Amphitheater create predictable surge windows. Lots surrounding these venues see concentrated violation activity on event nights.
Population growth: More people means more vehicles. According to U.S. Census Bureau migration data, Nashville has ranked among the fastest-growing metros in the country. The ratio of cars to available spots keeps tightening.
The result: enforcement demand is outpacing supply of active workers. Nashville is not a saturated market.
What You Need to Start — No Uniform, No Certification
The barrier to entry for Taggr is genuinely low. Here is the complete requirement list:
Smartphone (iPhone or Android)
Reliable vehicle to drive between lots
Passed background check
Age 18 or older
No uniform, no certifications, no law enforcement background, no formal interview, no weeks of onboarding before your first shift.
Compare that to the Metro Nashville W-2 hiring process: submit an application, wait for HR review, interview, complete a second interview in some cases, finish employer training, and get your uniform fitted. That process typically runs 2–4 weeks before your first paid shift.
With Taggr, once your background check clears, you download the app and find your first lot. Same-day starts are possible. Your first Wednesday after your first tag, the deposit lands.
For the full Taggr onboarding walkthrough, see how to start as a Taggr.
For guidance on independent contractor classification, the IRS provides clear guidance on what distinguishes 1099 work from traditional employment.
Stacking Taggr On Top of Your Existing Gig Work
This section is for Nashville gig workers already on the road.
If you are driving deliveries in Nashville, you pass enforceable private lots constantly. Apartment complexes in Germantown. Retail strips in Midtown. Parking structures adjacent to The Gulch. Any of those could be a contracted Taggr lot with violations ready to tag.
During slow delivery windows — the post-lunch lull from 2–4 PM, late evenings when delivery demand drops, Sunday mornings before the brunch rush — you have two choices. Wait for a ping. Or open Taggr and earn tag revenue.
There is no scheduling conflict. Taggr has no minimum hours, no assigned shifts, and no time commitments. You open the app when you want and close it when you are done. It layers on top of whatever you are already doing.
Many Nashville Taggrs describe their Taggr hours as some of their highest-earning time of the week. They focus on lot-to-lot enforcement during windows when delivery demand is slow anyway. The key variable is mileage: parking enforcement keeps you close, delivery sends you across the city. For the full comparison, see our Taggr vs. DoorDash breakdown.
For strategies on building a full multi-stream gig income, see our guide to side hustles for rideshare drivers.
How to Apply and Start This Week
Step 1: Apply at jointaggr.com — takes a few minutes.
Step 2: Pass your background check. Results typically arrive within a few days.
Step 3: Download the Taggr app.
Step 4: Find your first lot. Nashville has active contracts across the metro.
Step 5: Tag your first violation. The first Wednesday after that, your first deposit lands.
Taggr is live in Nashville and 58+ other US cities. There is no waitlist. No interview. No training class. No waiting weeks to find out if you got the job. Your first week will have a learning curve — every Taggr has one. By week two, most contractors have their preferred lots identified and a rhythm that works for their schedule. Parking enforcement jobs in Nashville on your own schedule, with pay depositing every Wednesday.
Apply at Taggr — the application takes a few minutes. A background check and a smartphone are all it takes to get started in Nashville. Get paid every Wednesday.
FAQ
How much do parking enforcement officers make in Nashville?
Traditional W-2 parking enforcement officers in Nashville earn $15–$22 per hour based on aggregator data from Indeed and ZipRecruiter. Taggr contractors work on a per-result model — up to $25 per tire tag and up to $5 per paper notice. Average hourly earnings range from $25–$65 depending on hours, lot density, and effort. Weekly earnings of $1,000 or more are possible for high-effort Taggrs, but individual results vary.
Do you need a license or certification for parking enforcement jobs in Nashville?
Not for Taggr. You need a smartphone, a reliable vehicle, and a passed background check — that is the complete list. No certification, no law enforcement background, no formal training required. Traditional W-2 employers like Metro Nashville may have their own onboarding requirements, which vary by position.
Is parking enforcement work 1099 or W-2 in Nashville?
Both options exist. Metro Nashville, LAZ Parking, ABM, and Premier Parking hire W-2 enforcement officers with fixed schedules and bi-weekly pay. Taggr is 1099 — you are an independent contractor with full schedule flexibility and no set shifts. For guidance on reporting 1099 contractor income and estimated taxes, see the IRS self-employed tax center or a qualified tax professional.
Is tagging cars safe?
The Taggr workflow is built to minimize confrontation. You scan plates, issue the notice, and move on. The entire process can happen without interacting with a vehicle owner. Disputes are handled through the app and Taggr’s support system, not through on-lot confrontation. The job is designed to avoid escalation, not invite it.
How often does Taggr pay?
Every Wednesday. There is no two-week hold, no minimum threshold to reach, and no waiting on a payment cycle. You earn it this week and it deposits next Wednesday.
Can I do Taggr while driving for DoorDash, Uber, or Instacart in Nashville?
Yes — and many Nashville Taggrs do exactly that. There are no scheduled shifts and no minimum hours, so nothing conflicts with existing gig work. Open the app during slow delivery windows, run a few lots, and earn tag revenue alongside your delivery income. For more on running multiple gig income streams, see our guide to best side hustles for delivery drivers.