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🇪🇸Tourist Guide

Driving in Spain

Complete guide for tourists and expats. Learn the road rules, speed limits, and essential information before you drive in Spain.

Right Side
Driving Side
120 km/h
Max Highway Speed
112
Emergency Number
Briefing

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.

PP

Reviewed by Pawan Priyadarshi

Founder of AutoviaTest · About the editor

Every figure on this page is cross-checked against the primary regulator listed in the Sources section below. We re-verify the page on the date shown above whenever a relevant law, fine, or toll changes.

Facts verified against primary sources on May 25, 2026

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Can You Drive in Spain?

Accepted Licenses From

EUEEASwitzerlandUSACanadaAustraliaUK

Validity Period: EU/EEA licenses valid indefinitely while current; non-EU/EEA licenses valid for 6 months from when the holder establishes residence in Spain. Tourists can drive on a non-EU licence for the duration of their stay if it conforms to the Vienna or Geneva Convention, otherwise an IDP or official Spanish translation is required

Important Note

After 6 months of residence, non-EU licence holders must exchange (canje) their licence if Spain has a bilateral agreement with the issuing country, or take a new Spanish test if not. IDP is a complement to the original licence, not a replacement

What to Carry in Your Car

Mandatory Items

  • V-16 connected emergency beacon (mandatory in Spanish-registered and rental vehicles from 1 January 2026; replaces warning triangles)
  • Two warning triangles (required for foreign-registered vehicles entering Spain)
  • Reflective high-visibility vest (one per occupant recommended; one mandatory for the driver)
  • Valid driving licence
  • Vehicle registration document (permiso de circulación)
  • Technical inspection card (ficha técnica / ITV) for Spanish-registered cars
  • Valid insurance certificate
  • Passport or national ID card

Recommended Items

  • First aid kit
  • Spare bulbs and fuses
  • European accident statement form (declaración amistosa de accidente)
  • DGT environmental sticker (distintivo ambiental) — required to enter any ZBE

Speed Limits

50

Urban Areas

km/h

90

Rural Roads

km/h

120

Highways/Motorways

km/h

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Toll Roads

Payment Methods

CashCredit/debit cardContactlessVia-T electronic tag

Average Cost

Typically 7-12 EUR per 100 km on remaining tolled autopistas (e.g. AP-68, AP-66, AP-8, AP-9)

Many former toll autopistas are now free, including the AP-7 in Catalonia and AP-2 (free since 1 September 2021) and the AP-7 ring of Alicante (permanently free from February 2026). The AP-68 Bilbao–Zaragoza remains tolled, around 40 EUR end-to-end. Free alternatives (autovías and carreteras nacionales) usually exist

Parking

Line Colors

Blue: Paid short-stay parking for visitors (zona azul, SER/ORA)
Green: Resident-priority paid parking (zona verde) — non-residents pay higher rates and have shorter max stays
Yellow: No parking / loading zone
White: Free parking (where present)
Red: Loading and unloading only (carga y descarga)

Parking Tips

  • Pay at the parquímetro machine and display the ticket on the dashboard, or use city apps (e.g. Madrid SER, ApparkB in Barcelona)
  • Zero-emission cars (DGT label 0) park free in Madrid SER zones; ECO cars get a 50-75% discount
  • Parking fines (zona azul/verde) are typically 90 EUR, reduced to 45 EUR if paid within 20 days; overstays under 30 min can often be cancelled at the meter with a small "anulación" ticket
  • Shopping-centre parking is often free for 1-2 hours with a purchase validation

Average Cost: Around 2.85 EUR/hour in Madrid SER zones; 1-3 EUR/hour typical across other city centres

Common Mistakes Tourists Make

  • 1Driving without the V-16 connected beacon in a Spanish-registered or rental car (mandatory from 1 January 2026; 80 EUR fine)
  • 2Entering a ZBE without a DGT environmental sticker on the windscreen — Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, Sevilla and 50+ other cities issue automatic 200 EUR fines via camera
  • 3Confusing 30 km/h streets (single lane per direction) with 50 km/h streets (two+ lanes) under the urban-speed reform
  • 4Parking in a green (resident) zone without paying the higher visitor tariff
  • 5Forgetting to switch on headlights in tunnels and on rainy motorways
  • 6Ignoring priority to the right at unmarked urban junctions
  • 7Underestimating tramo (average-speed) radars — common on M-30, A-7 sections and mountain passes

Traffic Fines

Speeding

100-600 EUR plus 0-6 points (no points if 100 EUR; 6 points and 600 EUR at top tier). Over 80 km/h above limit becomes a criminal offence

No Seatbelt

200 EUR + 4 points

Phone Use

200 EUR + 6 points for handheld use (doubled from 3 points in 2022 reform)

Red Light

200 EUR + 4 points

Illegal Parking

Typically 90-200 EUR; SER zone violations 90 EUR (45 EUR with 20-day early payment)

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Emergency Contacts

Police

112 (general) / 091 (Policía Nacional, urban) / 062 (Guardia Civil, rural and interurban roads) / 092 (Policía Local)

Ambulance

112 (general) / 061 (medical emergencies)

Fire

112 (general) / 080 (Bomberos, local) / 085 (Bomberos provincial)

Roadside Assistance

RACE: 900 100 992 · RACC: 900 365 505 (Catalonia)

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Sources

Every numeric and regulatory claim on this page is checked against the official Spain source listed below. Fines and fees in particular drift year to year — if a figure has changed since our last verification date, the linked source will reflect the current value.

  • Speed limits:DGT — Reglamento General de Circulación (límites de velocidad)
  • Alcohol limit:DGT — Consumo de alcohol y tasas máximas
  • Fines:DGT — Tipos de infracciones y sanciones
  • Tolls:Ministerio de Transportes y Movilidad Sostenible — Peajes 2026
  • In-car equipment:DGT — Dispositivos de preseñalización V-16
  • Foreign licence:DGT — Conducir con un permiso extranjero
  • Emergency contacts:Guardia Civil — Formas de contacto (062) y 112 Emergencias
  • Fuel:Ministerio para la Transición Ecológica — Geoportal de Gasolineras
  • Parking:Ayuntamiento de Madrid — Servicio de Estacionamiento Regulado (SER)
  • ZBE:MITECO — Zonas de Bajas Emisiones en España

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