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🇸🇪Tourist Guide

Driving in Sweden

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

Right Side
Driving Side
110 km/h
Max Highway Speed
112 (unified emergency)
Emergency Number
Briefing

Sweden's driving rules cluster around two facts every visitor needs to absorb on day one: the 0.2 promille BAC limit (one of the strictest in the EU, set in 1990) and the mandatory daytime headlight rule, in force since 1 October 1977 — Sweden was the first country in the world to require varselljus on all motor vehicles. Drive without dipped lights at noon in July and you're committing a fineable offence.

The motorway network is shorter than tourists expect — around 2,100 km of motorvägar — but well-built. The default motorway limit is 110 km/h; 120 km/h applies only on about 300 km of recently upgraded sections, mostly the southern E4 (Helsingborg–Stockholm) and parts of E6 down the west coast.

The E18 carries you Stockholm–Karlstad–Oslo. Speed cameras (ATK boxes) are dense and well-signed.

Two cities charge trängselskatt — congestion tax — by ANPR. Stockholm hits 45 SEK in the 07:00–08:29 and 16:00–17:29 peak windows with a 135 SEK daily cap during peak season (Mar 1–Jun 20, Aug 15–Nov 30); Gothenburg tops out at 22 SEK per passage and 60 SEK per day.

From 2026 EVs and plug-in hybrids pay the standard rate — the previous exemption is gone, and so is the taxi exemption in Stockholm. The quirk to know: passages aren't paid at the cordon.

Skatteverket bills the registered owner monthly. Rental companies will pass each charge through with an admin fee, often weeks after you've flown home — same trap as Italian ZTL fines.

Bridge tolls work the same way: Sundsvallsbron 9 SEK, Motalabron 5 SEK, Skurubron 4 SEK (added 1 October 2023), all camera-billed via infrastrukturavgift. The Öresundsbron to Denmark is the exception — pay at the cash/card lanes (470 DKK / ~720 SEK one way for cars in 2026, or 182 DKK with an ØresundGO contract).

The biggest practical hazard outside the cities is älg. Around 4,500 moose-vehicle collisions a year, plus 40,000+ with roe deer and wild boar.

The risk peaks in late September through October during the rut, and again in early summer at calving. The worst hours are the few before dawn and just after dusk.

The E45 inlandsvägen up through Dalarna and Norrland, and the E10 across Norrbotten, are the routes where you genuinely brake for the warning signs.

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 Sweden?

Accepted Licenses From

EUEEASwitzerlandUKUSACanadaAustraliaJapan

Validity Period: EU/EEA licences valid indefinitely. Non-EEA licences valid for tourist use; once you become folkbokförd (registered resident) in Sweden, the foreign non-EEA licence is valid for only one year from registration date — after that you must take the Swedish theory and practical test (no direct exchange for most non-EEA countries).

Important Note

IDP recommended for non-EEA visitors whose licence is not in Latin script. Transportstyrelsen accepts licences printed in Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, English, German or French; others need a certified translation or 1968 Vienna Convention IDP. The one-year clock only starts at residence registration, not at entry, so short-term tourists are unaffected.

What to Carry in Your Car

Mandatory Items

  • Valid driving licence
  • Vehicle registration certificate (registreringsbevis del 1)
  • Proof of trafikförsäkring (third-party motor insurance — compulsory under Trafikskadelagen 1975:1410)
  • Dipped headlights on at all times day and night (Trafikförordningen 3 kap. 49 §, in force since 1 Oct 1977)
  • Winter tyres or equivalent equipment when winter road conditions exist between 1 Dec – 31 Mar (snow, ice, slush or frost on any part of the road)

Recommended Items

  • Warning triangle (varningstriangel) — not legally mandated for cars in Sweden but strongly recommended and required if you cross into most other EU countries
  • Reflective high-visibility vest (reflexväst) — also not mandatory but standard practice
  • First aid kit
  • Ice scraper and snow brush — practical necessity Nov–Apr
  • Spare bulbs and fuses for older vehicles

Speed Limits

50

Urban Areas

km/h

70

Rural Roads

km/h

110

Highways/Motorways

km/h

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Toll Roads

Payment Methods

ANPR camera billing — invoice sent monthly by Skatteverket (congestion tax) or Transportstyrelsen (infrastructure charges) to the registered ownerForeign-registered vehicles billed via EPASS24 notification partnerØresundsbron: cash, card, BroPas or ØresundGO contract at the tollbooths

Average Cost

Stockholm congestion tax 11–45 SEK per passage (daily cap 105 SEK off-peak / 135 SEK peak season Mar–Jun and Aug–Nov). Gothenburg 9–22 SEK per passage (daily cap 60 SEK). Sundsvallsbron 9 SEK, Motalabron 5 SEK, Skurubron 4 SEK. Öresundsbron 470 DKK / ~720 SEK one way for cars (182 DKK with ØresundGO contract).

No traditional toll booths except on the Øresundsbron. All other charges are ANPR with monthly invoicing — the trap for tourists is that rental companies pass each passage through with an admin fee weeks after the trip. Trängselskatt is free on weekends, public holidays, the day before some public holidays, and throughout July (except the first five weekdays). Single-charge rule in Gothenburg: multiple passages within 60 minutes count as one. From 2026 EVs, plug-in hybrids and Stockholm taxis all pay the standard rate — earlier exemptions are gone.

Parking

Line Colors

White P on blue square: Permitted parking — read every sub-sign for time limits, days, fees and disc requirement
Yellow markings on kerb: No stopping / no parking (typically reserved for buses, taxis or loading)
Cross-hatched yellow box: No standing — keep clear (often near intersections and crossings)
Blue zone (datumparkering): In many towns, parking forbidden on the side with odd house numbers on odd dates between 00:00–06:00, and vice versa — check the local sign

Parking Tips

  • EasyPark and Parkster are the two dominant payment apps — most blue P-signs show codes for both
  • Parking signs stack: the top sign is the rule, sub-signs below modify it by time, day or duration — read all of them top to bottom
  • On streets without explicit signs, the default in built-up areas is 24-hour free parking up to 24 hours; outside built-up areas the limit is 24 hours but only on weekdays
  • Datumparkering (odd/even date side-switching) is common in older town centres — Uppsala, Malmö, parts of Stockholm — and catches first-time visitors at street-sweeping time

Average Cost: SEK 20–60 per hour in central Stockholm, Gothenburg and Malmö. Off-peak suburban paid zones around SEK 10–20/hour. Most outer-city and rural parking is free but time-limited (P-skiva, the parking disc, must show arrival time).

Common Mistakes Tourists Make

  • 1Driving without dipped headlights — mandatory at all times day and night under Trafikförordningen 3 kap. 49 § since 1977; daytime running lights alone do not satisfy the requirement on older cars
  • 2Drinking even one beer and assuming you're fine — the 0.2‰ BAC limit is genuinely one of the lowest in the EU, and police breath-testing at random stops is routine
  • 3Ignoring trängselskatt because there's no booth — the invoice arrives weeks later via the rental company with an admin fee per passage
  • 4Driving on M+S-only tyres after 1 December 2024 — passenger cars now need the 3PMSF Alpine snowflake symbol (or studded) when winter conditions exist between 1 Dec and 31 Mar
  • 5Underestimating moose at dusk and pre-dawn during the September–October rut, especially on E45 and E10
  • 6Treating yellow lights as advisory — running a yellow is a finable offence (SEK 2,500 from Feb 2025) and running a red is SEK 3,000 plus a near-automatic two-month licence suspension
  • 7Forgetting that ATK speed cameras are dense, signed and active — fines start at SEK 1,500 (or SEK 2,000 in 50 km/h zones)

Traffic Fines

Speeding

On roads with a 50 km/h limit or lower: SEK 2,000 (1–10 km/h over) up to SEK 4,000 (31–40 km/h over). On roads with limits above 50 km/h: SEK 1,500 (1–10 km/h over) up to SEK 4,000 (36–50 km/h over). Extreme excess (30+ km/h on rural roads or 20+ km/h in built-up areas) triggers licence suspension; vårdslöshet i trafik (reckless driving) charges possible above that.

No Seatbelt

SEK 1,500 for driver or passenger aged 15+. SEK 2,500 if the driver fails to ensure a passenger under 15 is properly belted or in an approved child restraint.

Phone Use

SEK 1,500 for handheld phone use while driving — criminal offence under Trafikförordningen since 1 Feb 2018. Hands-free permitted but distraction-based prosecution still possible.

Red Light

SEK 3,000 for running a red light, plus a near-automatic two-month licence suspension. Running a yellow light: SEK 2,500 (introduced 21 Feb 2025).

Illegal Parking

Felparkeringsavgift: SEK 450–1,300 in most municipalities depending on severity; up to SEK 1,300 in central Stockholm. Disabled bay misuse, fire-lane parking and obstructing emergency vehicles attract the highest tier.

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Emergency Contacts

Police

112 (emergencies) / 114 14 (non-urgent police, +46 77 114 14 00 from abroad)

Ambulance

112

Fire

112

Roadside Assistance

Assistancekåren: 020-912 912 (toll-free in Sweden) or +46 8 627 57 57 from abroad. Falck Assistance: 020-38 38 38. Many rentals include 24/7 breakdown via the rental company app.

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Sources

Every numeric and regulatory claim on this page is checked against the official Sweden 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:Transportstyrelsen — Speed limits
  • Alcohol limit:Polisen — Rattfylleri (0,2 promille; 1,0 grovt rattfylleri)
  • Fines:Penningböter — Riksåklagarens bötespraxis (korkortonline.se citing RB 25 kap.)
  • Tolls:Transportstyrelsen — Trängselskatt Stockholm (hours and amounts)
  • Trangselskatt Goteborg:Transportstyrelsen — Trängselskatt Göteborg (hours and amounts)
  • Infrastrukturavgift:Transportstyrelsen — Infrastrukturavgift (Sundsvall, Motala, Skurubron)
  • Oresundsbron:Øresundsbron — Prices 2026
  • In-car equipment:Transportstyrelsen — Winter tyres (3PMSF from 1 Dec 2024)
  • Foreign licence:Transportstyrelsen — Foreign driving licences (non-EEA: 1 year)
  • Emergency contacts:SOS Alarm — 112 (emergencies) and 114 14 (non-urgent police)
  • Fuel:fuel-prices.eu — Sweden national average (May 2026)
  • Daytime Running Lights:Sveriges riksdag — Trafikförordningen (1998:1276), 3 kap. 49 § (varselljus mandate, 1977)
  • MOOSE:Nationella Viltolycksrådet — Statistik viltolyckor (älg/rådjur)

Driving Guides for Other Countries

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AutoviaTest is an independent educational platform. Our content is based on official driving regulations and verified against government sources in each country. Practice materials are designed to help you prepare for your official driving test. For the most current requirements, always check with your local driving authority.

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