It's 12:41. You've been in the driver's seat for 53 minutes. You have no idea if the sweeper came, is coming, or got suspended. Sweepa tells you — live, to the minute — so you can lock the door and leave.
You moved your car at 11:28. You meant to sit for ten minutes. That was 65 minutes ago.
You've refreshed the city's sweeper page four times. It said 11:42 an hour ago. It still says 11:42. Last updated before you got in the car.
A truck turned onto your block. Not the sweeper. UPS.
The guy across the street left. You don't know why. You watch his parking spot.
Your noon call happened from the front seat. You muted it to honk at a delivery bike.
You were going to go to the gym.
You were going to finish the deck.
You were going to eat lunch.
You're still here.
That's a long weekend you didn't take. You do this because the city's tracker isn't a tracker — it's a log. Sweepa gives you those days back.
A sweeper icon moving block by block. Already-swept blocks shade red. Your saved block pulses when it's close. That's the whole screen.
"12 to 15 minutes." A live window, updated every minute using NYC traffic data. Not a static timestamp. Something you can plan a coffee run around.
Sweepa scores your ticket risk using NYC parking-violation data and reports from drivers on your block. Low risk? Go. High risk? Stay two more minutes.
Drop a pin or type the address.
See the sweeper, your ETA, your ticket risk.
Sweepa pings you when it's time to move.
Three numbers, one map, zero ads. Sweepa doesn't ask for your attention — it gives it back.
Enter your email to get your access code and start using the Sweepa web prototype.