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Novinky z odvetvia • 4 min čítania

Krádeže nákladu v Európe: Prečo sa zvyšuje a ako môžu vozové parky znížiť riziko

Vytvorené: 15. 04. 2026

Aktualizované: 15. 04. 2026

Krádeže nákladu sú čoraz väčšou hrozbou v celej Európe. To, čo sa kedysi považovalo za príležitostné narušenie, je dnes trvalejším a organizovanejším rizikom pre cestnú dopravu, ktoré ovplyvňuje vozové parky, vodičov a širší dodávateľský reťazec.

Počet nahlásených strát a incidentov prudko vzrástol, pričom jeden zo široko citovaných údajov z odvetvia poukazuje na 438% nárast v Európe v posledných rokoch. Len v decembri 2025 bolo v spravodajskom systéme TAPA EMEA Intelligence System zaznamenaných 557 trestných činov v nákladnej doprave v 38 krajinách, a hoci bola zverejnená hodnota menej ako jedného z piatich incidentov, týchto 100 prípadov stále predstavovalo viac ako 43 miliónov EUR.

V tomto článku sa zaoberáme súčasnými trendmi a tým, čo môžu manažéri a prevádzkovatelia vozových parkov urobiť, aby minimalizovali svoje riziká.

Na čo sa páchatelia zameriavajú

Zásielky potravín a nápojov patria v Európe k najčastejším kategóriám, ktoré sú terčom útokov, a predstavujú 10 % prípadov krádeží. Vysoké postavenie majú aj elektronika, kovy a alkohol. Tento tovar je atraktívny, pretože sa ľahko premiestňuje, ľahko predáva a často je ťažké ho vystopovať, keď sa dostane na sekundárne trhy.

Príkladom môže byť nedávna krádež 12-tonovej zásielky tyčiniek KitKat(https://www.cbsnews.com/news/nestle-kitkat-shipment-heist-stolen-europe/) na ceste z Talianska do Poľska. Spoločnosť Nestlé uviedla, že zmiznutý náklad predstavoval približne 413 793 tyčiniek, čo ukazuje, ako rýchlo sa môže stať bežná spotrebiteľská zásielka terčom pri preprave cez hranice.

Tieto zásielky sú atraktívnym cieľom pre organizované skupiny, pretože sa dajú rýchlo vyložiť, čo vedie k rýchlej návratnosti.

Kde a ako dochádza ku krádeži nákladu

Únosy a krádeže počas prepravy

K trestnej činnosti v nákladnej doprave často dochádza počas prepravy nákladu. V správe Munich Re 2025 sa uvádza, že únosy predstavujú 21 % incidentov, zatiaľ čo 41 % krádeží sa stalo počas prepravy. To pripomína, že riziko sa nezačína, keď nákladné vozidlo zaparkuje na noc. Môže sa začať dlho predtým, ako vozidlo na noc zastaví, najmä na exponovaných koridoroch alebo trasách, kde je viditeľnosť nákladu a bezpečnostné kontroly slabšie.

Útoky na zaparkované nákladné vozidlá

Zaparkované vozidlá zostávajú hlavným zraniteľným miestom. V Spojenom kráľovstve spoločnosť Munich Re oznámila, že takmer polovica všetkých krádeží sa odohráva na nezabezpečených parkoviskách a odpočívadlách pri cestách. V celej Európe sa nezabezpečené miesta pri cestách a odpočívadlá naďalej výrazne objavujú v hláseniach o nákladnej kriminalite, najmä tam, kde majú vodiči obmedzené alternatívy a zabezpečené miesta sú plné.

Organizované skupinové útoky

Niektoré z najviac znepokojujúcich incidentov vykazujú koordináciu. Spravodajská služba Risk Intelligence nedávno zdokumentovala útoky v Nemecku, pri ktorých sa počas jednej noci stali terčom desiatky nákladných vozidiel na koridore A1. Pri jednom z incidentov z novembra 2023 boli na servisných a odpočívacích miestach vrátane Ostetal South a Grundbergsee South porezané prívesy 67 nákladných vozidiel. Podobné útoky sa na tej istej trase odohrali už niekoľko mesiacov predtým.

Európske horúce miesta pre trestnú činnosť v nákladnej doprave

Nemecko zostáva jedným z najhorúcejších miest, najmä kvôli rozsahu nákladnej dopravy, ktorá prechádza cez túto krajinu. Analýza ukázala, že Nemecko zaznamenalo v roku 2023 2 498 krádeží nákladu, čo je viac ako dvojnásobok Francúzska na druhom mieste. Medzi ďalšie opakujúce sa horúce miesta patria Francúzsko, Taliansko, Španielsko a Spojené kráľovstvo.

Tento model odráža realitu európskej nákladnej dopravy. Husté logistické siete, veľké nákladné uzly a intenzívne využívané diaľnice vytvárajú viac príležitostí pre organizovanú trestnú činnosť, najmä keď kapacita zabezpečeného parkovania nedokáže držať krok s dopytom.

Úloha technológie v modernej krádeži nákladu

Spoločnosť Munich Re varuje, že zlodeji nákladu čoraz častejšie používajú sofistikovanejšie metódy vrátane klamania identitou, podvodov s využitím kybernetických technológií a iných taktík, ktoré obchádzajú tradičné kontroly. Širšie správy z odvetvia poukazujú na rušenie GPS, manipuláciu s dokumentmi a presmerovanie zásielok ako súčasť tohto posunu.

Ukradnutý náklad sa teraz môže začať kompromitovanými údajmi, podvodným dopravcom, odkloneným pokynom alebo vozidlom, ktorého pohyb sa už nedá správne sledovať. Pre vozové parky to znamená, že prevencia krádeží teraz zahŕňa viac než len fyzickú bezpečnosť. Vyžaduje si aj prísnejšie dispečerské procesy, lepšiu kontrolu údajov o zásielkach a jasnejší prehľad v reálnom čase.

Vedľajšie účinky na vozové parky a vodičov

Najzrejmejší vplyv je finančný. Odcudzený tovar vedie k strate tovaru, poistným udalostiam a narušeniu prevádzky. Priama hodnota chýbajúceho nákladu je však len časťou problému. Oneskorené dodávky, poškodenie vozidla, vynechané časové intervaly a nespokojnosť zákazníkov môžu skutočné náklady ešte zvýšiť.

Sú tu aj ľudské náklady. Vodiči môžu čeliť zastrašovaniu, konfrontácii alebo šoku zo zistenia, že s ich vozidlom niekto manipuloval, keď odpočívali. Aj v prípade, že nedochádza k priamemu násiliu, vystavenie nezabezpečeným cestným zastávkam vyvoláva stres, únavu a pocit zraniteľnosti, čo môže mať vplyv na pohodu vodičov a ich udržanie v práci.

Z prevádzkového hľadiska sa reťazové účinky rýchlo šíria dodávateľským reťazcom. Jediná krádež môže znamenať zmeškané dodacie lehoty, presmerovanie vozidiel, nedostatok zásob a ďalší tlak na už aj tak vyťažené tímy. V prípade nákladu citlivého na teplotu, kritického z hľadiska času alebo nákladu vysokej hodnoty sa môžu dôsledky rýchlo znásobiť.

Ako znížiť riziko krádeže nákladu

Neexistuje jediné riešenie, ale vozové parky môžu znížiť riziko pomocou štruktúrovanejšieho prístupu k plánovaniu, parkovaniu a bezpečnosti.

Ak je to možné, používajte zabezpečené parkovanie

Zabezpečené parkovanie zostáva jednou z najjasnejších oblastí, ktoré je potrebné zlepšiť. Rámec bezpečnostných požiadaviek na parkovanie TAPA poskytuje medzinárodne uznávané kritérium pre bezpečné parkovanie nákladných vozidiel a pomáha prevádzkovateľom posúdiť, ktoré miesta ponúkajú lepšiu ochranu vozidiel, nákladu a vodičov. Výberom akreditovaných miest sa krádeže nákladu neodstránia, ale môže sa výrazne znížiť možnosť útoku organizovanej trestnej činnosti.

V praxi to môže znamenať, že zastavíte skôr, ako ste plánovali, aby ste sa dostali na bezpečnejšie miesto, namiesto toho, aby ste pokračovali na nezabezpečenú odstavnú plochu. Hoci sa to v danom momente môže zdať menej efektívne, často je to odolnejšia voľba.

Pre vozové parky nie je výzvou len vedieť o bezpečnom parkovaní, ale aj mať k nemu jednoduchý prístup. SNAP pomáha preklenúť túto medzeru tým, že vodičom a prevádzkovateľom poskytuje lepší prehľad o dôveryhodných možnostiach parkovania v Spojenom kráľovstve a Európe, čím zjednodušuje plánovanie a rezervovanie bezpečnejších zastávok od samého začiatku.

Prečítajte si viac: Parkovanie nákladných vozidiel v Európe: pravidlá, nedostatky, riziká

Posilnenie technologických a kybernetických kontrol

Kybernetická bezpečnosť sa v súčasnosti zaraďuje popri fyzickej bezpečnosti do každej serióznej stratégie prevencie krádeží. Nástroje na sledovanie, geofencing a ochranu proti rušeniu môžu pomôcť, ale len ak sú podporené jasnými procesmi. Vozové parky by mali preskúmať, ako sa zdieľajú údaje o zásielkach, kto môže meniť pokyny na trase, ako sa overujú dokumenty o doručení a čo sa stane, ak vozidlo náhle zmizne z dohľadu.

Ovládače podpory

Ovládače sú často poslednou líniou obrany, ale nemali by niesť bremeno sami. Záleží na jasných eskalačných postupoch, pravidelných kontrolách, plánovaní bezpečného odpočinku a školeniach o podozrivých aktivitách.

Rozširovanie bezpečného parkovania v Európe

Jedným z najväčších štrukturálnych problémov krádeží nákladu je nedostatok bezpečných parkovísk pre nákladné vozidlá. Ak vodiči nemôžu nájsť chránené miesta s riadnym osvetlením, kontrolou prístupu a sociálnym zázemím, je pravdepodobnejšie, že skončia práve na miestach, na ktoré sa už zameriavajú zlodeji.

Spoločnosť SNAP vyškolila Parking Safety Requirement Level 3-qualified auditors, ktorí pracujú na akreditácii viacerých parkovísk v Spojenom kráľovstve a kontinentálnej Európe, čím pomáhajú rozširovať dostupnosť bezpečného parkovania nákladných vozidiel a znižovať možnosti organizovaných krádeží.

Rezervujte si bezpečné odpočívadlá ešte dnes

Pre vozové parky nie je výzvou len pochopenie rizika, ale aj zavedenie bezpečnejších rozhodnutí o zastavení do každodennej prevádzky. V spoločnosti SNAP pomáhame vodičom a prevádzkovateľom identifikovať dôveryhodné možnosti parkovania v Spojenom kráľovstve a Európe, čím uľahčujeme plánovanie trás s ohľadom na bezpečnosť a pohodu vodičov. [Zaregistrujte sa ešte dnes] (https://snapacc.com/)

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štvrtok 30 apríla 2026 • Novinky z odvetvia

NÁBOR NOVEJ GENERÁCIE: PRILÁKANIE MLADŠÍCH TALENTOV DO ODVETVIA NÁKLADNEJ DOPRAVY

Evelyn Long

The UK driver shortage is a familiar headline, but the real story is more complex than the numbers. It’s a fundamental shift in the workforce that requires a new mindset. While it’s a crisis, it’s also an opportunity for forward-thinking fleets to innovate and gain an edge over the competition. The companies that successfully attract the next generation of drivers will thrive in the coming decades. Here is a quick look at the forces fueling the disparity between retiring heavy goods vehicle (HGV) drivers and new apprentices. National unemployment figures are rising. In 2025, it climbed to leading up to December, the highest rate in nearly five years. At the same time, there is a severe shortage of professional drivers.The UK’s driver shortage is not a simple labor deficit. It is a skills shortage. Many barriers prevent the general unemployed population from filling the role, such as: ● High cost and time commitment for obtaining an HGV license● The requirement for a certificate of professional competence● The unique lifestyle demands that do not align with a standard 9-to-5 jobThe paradox of high unemployment and significant driver shortage is why industry bodies are not passively waiting for the job market to fix the problem. The government implemented , from enhancing the current supply chain’s efficiency to improving conditions to attract more drivers to the sector. The shortage is not solely due to a lack of new drivers. The industry is actively losing experienced professionals. While the proportion of businesses reporting vacancies has , the issue lies in the persistent hiring gap. Many are leaving for better pay or benefits elsewhere. 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The industry’s image is as significant a barrier as any practical challenge. The goal is to shift the narrative from the outdated “lonely trucker” stereotype to that of a “skilled logistics professional.” The first step to rebranding is to define what the job entails in the 21st century. Essentially, HGV professionals drive vehicles with a gross combined weight of , ensuring the safe and efficient delivery of products at the right time, location and condition. To attract young talent, fleet managers must acknowledge that most are seeking career paths and a sense of meaning. Recruiters can map out a visible career ladder to show that the role is not a “dead-end” job. For example, a path can look like a progression from lead driver to new apprentice mentor to transport planner to fleet manager. Connecting the job to a larger purpose is a sound strategy, as many of the younger generations want to make an impact. Link the driver's daily tasks to the bigger picture. Instead of stating how the job involves moving products, recruiters can highlight how the work ensures families have fresh food on their tables. Here are some changes fleet managers can adopt to become more effective employers.Ensure the apprenticeship program provides a modern, engaging and supportive experience. Pair apprentices with experienced drivers who are willing and trained to be mentors. Leverage technology in training. For example, programs can include high-fidelity driving simulators to allow apprentices to practice responding to hazardous conditions. The training must cover more than just passing the driving test. Include modules on customer service, financial literacy for potential owner-operators, in-cab technology and health and wellness courses for those on the road. Flexibility and predictability in scheduling are key attractors. 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utorok 28 apríla 2026 • Novinky z odvetvia

AKO MÔŽE NAPÄTIE OKOLO IRÁNU OVPLYVNIŤ EURÓPSKU LOGISTIKU

Lucy Mowatt

Geopolitical conflict rarely stays confined to the region where it began. In global logistics, disruption in one part of the world can quickly ripple through supply chains thousands of kilometres away.That is the reality as tensions escalate around Iran and the Strait of Hormuz – a narrow shipping channel between Iran and Oman that serves as one of the world’s most important transport corridors.Roughly passes through the strait, alongside large volumes of liquefied natural gas and other commodities. When shipping through this corridor slows or stops, the consequences are felt around the world.For transport operators in Europe, the effects are already beginning to emerge through rising fuel costs, rerouted shipping traffic and growing uncertainty in global supply chains. have already begun avoiding routes close to the Strait of Hormuz due to that transit is not allowed and that the area is unsafe. Vessels passing through or caught up in military action. Instead, they are diverting vessels via the at the southern tip of Africa. Although this avoids high-risk zones, it also adds thousands of miles to many journeys.For global supply chains, the effects are clear: Longer transit times Increased fuel consumption for vessels Higher freight costs for cargo ownersWhat begins as a maritime disruption often ends up affecting inland logistics once delayed cargo finally reaches European ports. This creates a “feast or famine” effect: periods with little cargo to move followed by sudden surges when multiple vessels arrive at once.Energy markets have been shaken by activity in the Strait of Hormuz.Because the waterway handles such a large share of global oil exports, any disruption immediately affects expectations about future supply. Even short-term interruptions can cause price volatility across international markets.For road transport, the implications are immediate. Diesel remains the primary fuel for most commercial fleets across Europe; sudden price increases can quickly affect operating margins.Early signals of this shift are already visible. According to, Spain’s carrier federation Fenadismer reports that in the 10 days following the outbreak of the conflict in Iran, diesel prices in Spain rose by more than 30%, reaching about €1.80 per litre.For haulage operators, this kind of volatility creates difficult planning conditions. Fuel often represents one of the largest operational costs for a fleet, and sudden increases can affect everything from freight rates to contract negotiations.Insurance markets respond quickly when geopolitical risks escalate.When tensions rise in maritime corridors, insurers may or otherwise alter policy wording. Ships travelling through or near those areas face higher premiums or additional surcharges for each voyage.These costs rarely remain confined to the shipping sector. Instead, they are passed through the logistics chain in the form of higher freight rates and increased transportation costs.Another, less visible consequence of shipping disruption is the impact on container availability.Global shipping depends on the circulation of containers between ports. When vessels are rerouted onto longer journeys, and take more time to return to export hubs.Over time, this can create imbalances across the global container system.Ports receiving delayed or diverted vessels may also experience when ships arrive, while exporters in other regions may struggle to secure empty containers for outbound cargo.For European freight operators, these disruptions can translate into irregular cargo volumes and more unpredictable container collection schedules.The disruption around the Strait of Hormuz comes at a time when global shipping routes are already under pressure.Since late 2023, instability in the Red Sea corridor – particularly around the Bab el-Mandeb Strait and the southern entrance to the Suez Canal – has forced many shipping companies to divert vessels away from the region.In response, numerous carriers began rerouting ships around the Cape of Good Hope, adding significant time to journeys between Asia and Europe.Now, with tensions affecting traffic near the Strait of Hormuz as well, the pressure on international shipping routes is intensifying.The combined disruption of the Strait of Hormuz and the Red Sea illustrates how dependent global logistics remains on a small number of maritime chokepoints. The Strait of Hormuz is critical for the global flow of oil and energy products. The Red Sea and Suez Canal corridor, meanwhile, is the primary maritime gateway for containerised goods moving between Asia and Europe.When instability affects either corridor individually, shipping networks can usually adapt by adjusting schedules or rerouting vessels.With the Red Sea still heavily disrupted and traffic through the Strait of Hormuz now sharply reduced, the system becomes far less flexible.With fewer safe passages available, containers on affected services remain in transit for longer period, tightening availability on some trade lanes.Although these disruptions start at sea, their consequences are ultimately felt on Europe’s roads.Fleet operators may encounter:Energy market instability can drive rapid changes in diesel prices.Delayed cargo arrivals can put pressure on logistics providers to move goods more quickly once shipments reach port.Insurance premiums, longer shipping routes, rising fuel prices and surcharges all contribute to increased transportation costs.Events around the Strait of Hormuz and the Red Sea highlight a growing reality for global logistics: supply chains now operate in an environment where geopolitical risk can quickly reshape trade routes.“Global logistics has always been interconnected, but events like these show just how disruption can reshape logistics networks,” says Nick Renton, Head of European Strategy & Business Development at SNAP. “Even when the initial crisis occurs thousands of miles away, the effects soon reach European supply chains through fuel prices, shipping delays and tighter delivery windows.“The fleets that adapt most effectively are those that plan for uncertainty – with flexible routes, better information and and rest when schedules change.”With access to reliable information and trusted truck parking across Europe, SNAP helps fleets and drivers stay flexible, plan ahead and keep journeys moving.

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streda 11 marca 2026 • Novinky z odvetvia

PARKOVANIE NÁKLADNÝCH VOZIDIEL V EURÓPE: PRAVIDLÁ, NEDOSTATKY, RIZIKÁ

Guest

Ask most fleet operators what makes life harder than it needs to be and you’ll hear the same answer across Europe: truck parking.Drivers have to stop. Hours rules and rest requirements make that non-negotiable. But on many of Europe’s busiest transport corridors, finding a safe, legal place to park is still uncertain. Capacity is low, security varies widely and most urban hubs aren’t built with HGVs in mind.That pressure has consequences. When designated areas are full, drivers are pushed towards places that were never intended for HGV parking: slip roads, access ramps and industrial estates. Compliance becomes a choice between two risks: stop where you shouldn’t, or keep driving when you shouldn’t.When truck parking overflows into unsuitable places, the environment becomes dangerous: poor visibility, high speeds, unpredictable manoeuvres and limited escape routes. starkly in February 2026, reporting fatal crashes in Germany and Belgium involving stationary lorries. The article challenges the easy explanation of “illegal parking” and points back to the underlying cause: drivers were out of driving time and the spaces were gone.In addition, a shortage of truck parking in Europe doesn’t just mean “no space”; it often means the only available space is poorly lit, unmonitored and isolated. That elevates the risk of theft and driver harm, which can have a knock-on effect for supply chain reliability.Poor parking provision also affects workforce sustainability. When drivers face uncertainty around legal, safe stopping, it makes the role harder and less attractive – compounding .For a long time, the conversation about truck parking focused on enforcement: where you can’t park and the penalties that follow. Increasingly, the focus is moving towards provision: where drivers can stop safely, reliably and legally. Under revised Trans-European Transport Network (TEN-T) rules, EU Member States must ensure the development of certified secure parking . The same requirement sets expectations for the location of truck parking. It must be immediately on the network or within 3km of an exit, which will have benefits for route planning. Alongside this shift, the European Commission positions safe and secure truck parking as a priority within its Intelligent Transport Systems work, including the need for to help drivers locate suitable sites.But the EU isn’t just asking Member States to add more truck parking spaces. It’s also defining what “safe and secure” means. In April 2022, the European Commission adopted EU standards for , categorising sites into four security levels: bronze, silver, gold and platinum. The intention is to create transparency for drivers and fleets, and to support investment by giving operators a clear target to design and audit against.This sits against a significant capacity gap. A European Commission study estimates a across the bloc, with the gap potentially rising towards half a million by 2040 if the network does not scale at the pace freight demand requires.Looking at more practical aspects of the situation, what are HGV parking rules and regulations in Europe?At first glance, HGV parking rules across Europe look consistent: Motorways are not designed to absorb overflow parking. Hard shoulders exist for emergencies and safety buffers. Access ramps are not for planned stopping.Urban areas add a layer of complexity. Local restrictions and enforcement are common because HGV parking competes with residents, retail and public space – and because badly parked vehicles create safety risks.Rules around HGV parking in the UK are clear. Trucks should use designated areas such as motorway services, truckstops and lorry parks. Conversely, drivers must avoid parking in locations that create risks, such as pavements, verges and central reservations. Restrictions around parking in residential areas vary by local authority, so it’s vital to check if this is unavoidable. The major constraint is supply. The RHA’s estimate of an , with very high utilisation on key routes, helps explain why informal and unsafe parking persists even where drivers know it isn’t ideal. In 2022, the Department for Transport across England, aimed at better rest areas and more secure parking, framed as part of a broader programme to improve roadside facilities.In Germany, motorway stopping rules are anchored in the (StVO), which makes clear that stopping on the autobahn – including the hard shoulder – is prohibited except in emergencies. That means running out of driving time is not treated as justification. Fines increase if obstruction or danger is caused, and enforcement is active on heavily used corridors. Poland follows the familiar motorway rule that hard shoulders are reserved for breakdowns and emergencies. The nuance appears within cities, where tonnage-based entry restrictions and are common. Overnight HGV parking in urban areas can require municipal approval and enforcement varies between municipalities. For cross-border fleets, that means treating urban stopping as permission-led rather than assumed.France reinforces the same principle through the . Articles R417-9 and R417-10 classify dangerous or obstructive parking offences, and stopping on autoroute carriageways or shoulders is prohibited except in cases of absolute necessity. Penalties can include fines and licence points.However, publishes dedicated information for secure truck parking on its network, reflecting how motorway operators guide HGV stopping into appropriate locations.Spain’s prohibits stopping on motorway shoulders except in emergencies, aligning with broader European practice. Additional complexity lies at municipal level. Many cities operate local overnight bans or restrict HGV parking to designated industrial zones, with enforcement handled by local police rather than motorway authorities. That creates a layered compliance environment: legal on the motorway network does not automatically mean legal in urban areas.To highlight positive developments, that a truck parking facility in La Jonquera became the first in Spain to receive TAPA certification, describing measures such as controlled access, fencing, lighting and continuous monitoring.Italy distinguishes clearly between motorway carriageways, ramps and designated service areas. Stopping on access or exit ramps is explicitly prohibited, and enforcement around motorway infrastructure is consistent. Importantly, Italy differentiates between aree di servizio (full service areas with facilities) and simpler rest or parking lay-bys, which may not support overnight welfare needs. However, Italy is also seeing new secure truck parking developments focused on welfare and security, reflecting the wider European momentum towards better provision.Across Europe, an additional regulatory layer now shapes truck parking decisions: Low Emission Zones (LEZs) and restricted urban traffic zones. Cities in France (Crit’Air), Germany (Umweltzonen), Spain (Zonas de Bajas Emisiones) and Italy (ZTL areas) impose vehicle-class or permit requirements that can apply even to stationary vehicles within the zone. A driver who parks overnight in a restricted area without the correct classification or registration risks fines – even if the stop itself is otherwise legal. Across Europe in 2026, the rules are clear. The constraint is capacity, especially near urban hubs and on high-volume corridors. For fleets, this has a practical impact: European truck parking can’t be left to chance at the end of a shift. It needs to be planned with the same seriousness as , routing, driver hours and security – because when the network fails to provide legal space, every other compliance system gets squeezed.SNAP can help. .