Driving in Spain in 2026 means dealing with three things the rest of Europe mostly doesn't: the V-16 connected emergency beacon, the patchwork of Zonas de Bajas Emisiones (ZBE), and the steady disappearance of peajes on what used to be toll motorways. As of 1 January 2026 the V-16 conectada is the only legal way to mark a stopped vehicle on Spanish roads — the orange beacon goes on the roof and pings its GPS position straight to the DGT 3.0 platform, replacing the two warning triangles.
The rule binds Spanish-registered and rental cars; foreign-registered vehicles still use triangles, but if you're renting in Spain the V-16 should already be in the glovebox.
The ZBE rollout is the other change you'll notice immediately. Since 1 January 2023 every Spanish city above 50,000 inhabitants is legally required to operate one, and by early 2026 around 56 cities have them fully active with cameras issuing fines — Madrid Central (now ZBE Distrito Centro), Barcelona's ZBE Rondes, Sevilla, Valencia, Bilbao, Valladolid, A Coruña.
You need a DGT environmental sticker (0, ECO, C, B) stuck to the windscreen; without one, plate-recognition cameras issue 200 EUR fines automatically. Rentals come pre-stickered, but check before you drive.
Big-city specifics worth knowing: Madrid's SER parking system uses blue (visitors) and green (resident-priority) zones, charges around 2.85 EUR/hour, and gives free parking to zero-emission cars. The M-30 ring is tunneled in long sections and enforces a 70 km/h limit with average-speed radars — the famous "radares de tramo" — so braking before a fixed gantry won't save you.
In Catalonia, large chunks of the AP-7 went toll-free on 1 September 2021 along with the AP-2, and Alicante's AP-7 ring was made permanently free in February 2026; the AP-68 Bilbao–Zaragoza is still tolled and at around 40 EUR end-to-end remains one of the most expensive in the country.
One regional quirk: in rural Galicia, Asturias and parts of the Basque Country, two-lane carreteras convencionales often have a 90 km/h posted limit but blind curves that locals take at half that — and the Guardia Civil's mobile radars know the lay-bys.
Reviewed by Pawan Priyadarshi
Founder of AutoviaTest · About the editor
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