To drive legally and own a car in Spain you need a valid licence (EU licences are recognised; non-EU residents generally must exchange theirs within a set period of becoming resident), and your car must have valid insurance, a current ITV (roadworthiness test) once it's old enough, and its road tax (IVTM) paid. Buying or selling a used car requires a transfer of ownership at the DGT and an NIE. Spain runs a points-based licence (you start with a points balance and lose points for offences), and traffic fines (multas) carry a prompt-payment discount but can be appealed within tight deadlines. Serious offences (drink-driving, excessive speed) can be criminal. Non-residents and tourists can drive on a foreign or international licence within limits. This pillar links to detailed guides on each; we offer English-speaking legal and gestoría support across all of them.
Your Driving Licence
The first question for any expat driver is whether your licence is valid in Spain. The position depends on where it's from:
- EU/EEA licences are recognised and you can generally drive on them as a resident, with some registration/renewal formalities over time.
- Non-EU licences (such as UK post-Brexit, US, Canadian, Australian, South African) can be used for an initial period after you become resident, but you then generally have to exchange your licence for a Spanish one — and whether a straightforward exchange is possible depends on whether Spain has a recognition agreement with your country; where there isn't, you may have to take the Spanish test.
- Tourists and non-residents can drive on their valid foreign licence (with an International Driving Permit where required) for visits, without exchanging.
This is one of the most important and time-sensitive issues for new residents, because driving on a non-exchanged, no-longer-valid foreign licence after the initial period can leave you effectively driving without a valid licence — a serious matter. The exchange process, the agreement position for different countries, and the deadlines are covered in our licence exchange guide. Once you hold or exchange to a Spanish licence, you're also brought into the points system (below). Getting your licence position right early is the foundation of driving legally in Spain.
Don't let your foreign licence lapse into invalidity
Non-EU residents can usually drive on their home licence only for an initial period after becoming resident, then must exchange it. Driving after that window on a non-exchanged licence can count as driving without a valid licence — a serious offence. Sort the exchange (or check the agreement position for your country) early.
Owning a Car: the Essentials
If you own a vehicle in Spain, four things must always be in order — miss any and you risk fines or worse:
| Requirement | What it means |
|---|---|
| Insurance | Valid motor insurance is compulsory — at least third-party cover. Driving uninsured is a serious offence. See car insurance. |
| ITV | The periodic roadworthiness test, due once the car reaches a certain age and then at intervals. See ITV. |
| Road tax (IVTM) | An annual municipal vehicle tax paid to your town hall. See road tax. |
| Registration in your name | Ownership must be correctly registered/transferred at the DGT. See buying and selling. |
Buying or selling a used car involves a formal transfer of ownership (transferencia) through the DGT (the traffic authority), for which you need an NIE, and there are real risks if it's done badly — a buyer can inherit hidden debts or fines, and a seller who doesn't properly notify the transfer can remain liable for the new owner's later fines. These transactions, and the ongoing obligations (ITV, road tax, insurance), are exactly the kind of administrative-legal matters our gestoría service handles for expats, in English. The linked guides below cover each in detail.
Topics & Guides
We've broken driving and vehicle matters into focused guides — use these to go deeper on whatever applies to you:
Buying a Used Car
Checks before buying, the transfer of ownership, and avoiding hidden debts.
Buying a car →Car Insurance & Accidents
Compulsory cover and what to do after a crash.
Car insurance →Two related topics are covered elsewhere on the site: exchanging your foreign licence for a Spanish one, and importing a car to Spain (with its matriculación tax and registration). For driving on a foreign licence as a visitor or before you exchange, see driving as a non-resident or tourist.
Fines & the Points System
Spain enforces its road rules through two parallel mechanisms: monetary fines (multas) and licence points. Many offences carry both a fine and a deduction of points. Understanding both is essential, especially for expats who may receive a fine notification in Spanish and not know how to respond.
Traffic fines typically offer a substantial prompt-payment discount (often around half) if paid within a short window, which creates a real decision: pay quickly and cheaply, or contest it. Crucially, fines can be appealed (recurso), but only within tight deadlines, and there are common grounds — particularly for non-residents who may not have been properly notified. Our traffic fines guide explains the discount, the notification rules, and how to appeal. Separately, the points permit means each driver has a balance of points that are deducted for offences; lose them all and you lose your licence (with recovery courses available to regain some). The points system applies to your Spanish licence — and, importantly, can affect drivers on exchanged or foreign licences too — as explained in our points system guide. Treating a fine or points loss promptly and correctly, rather than ignoring a Spanish notification, is what avoids escalation.
When It Becomes Criminal
Most traffic matters in Spain are administrative — a fine and possibly points. But a category of serious driving offences crosses into the criminal law, with far heavier consequences including criminal records, driving bans, and even prison in the worst cases. These include drink- and drug-driving above defined limits, driving at grossly excessive speeds, driving without ever having held a licence (or while banned), and reckless driving causing danger.
This distinction matters enormously, because an expat facing one of these isn't dealing with a simple fine to pay or appeal — they're potentially facing the criminal courts, where proper legal representation and a clear understanding of the process are essential, all in Spanish. The thresholds (for example the blood-alcohol levels at which an offence becomes criminal rather than administrative) and the penalties are set out in our driving offences guide. If you're stopped and accused of a serious driving offence, or summoned in connection with one, it's not something to handle alone — getting prompt legal advice is important both for the immediate situation and for protecting your licence and record.
What Expats Get Wrong
The recurring driving mistakes that catch expats out in Spain:
- Driving on a lapsed foreign licence. Continuing on a non-EU licence after the initial period, without exchanging, can amount to driving without a valid licence.
- Ignoring a fine notification in Spanish. Not responding (or missing the discount/appeal windows) lets a fine escalate, sometimes with enforcement against assets.
- Buying a car without proper checks. Inheriting the previous owner's debts, fines or an outstanding finance charge on the vehicle.
- Selling a car without properly notifying the DGT. Remaining liable for the buyer's later fines and road tax.
- Letting the ITV or road tax lapse. Driving without a valid ITV, or non-payment of road tax, brings fines and complications.
- Driving a foreign-plated car as a resident. Keeping a UK or other foreign-registered car beyond the permitted period once resident, instead of importing/re-registering it.
Almost all of these are avoidable with the right information and timely action — and most are administrative matters that a gestoría or lawyer handles routinely. The common thread is that Spain's vehicle bureaucracy is unforgiving of lapses and is largely conducted in Spanish, which is exactly where English-speaking support removes the risk.
How We Help
We provide English-speaking legal and gestoría support across everything to do with driving and vehicles in Spain. We handle the transfer of ownership when you buy or sell a car (with the checks that protect you), keep your ITV, road tax and registration in order, deal with traffic fines — including appeals within the deadlines — and advise on the points system, insurance and accidents, and serious driving offences where the criminal courts are involved. We also coordinate licence exchange and car imports. It's all in plain English on a clear quote. Book a consultation for help with any driving or vehicle matter.
Related Guides
Frequently Asked Questions
It depends on where it's from and your status. EU/EEA licences are recognised for residents. Non-EU licences (UK post-Brexit, US, etc.) can be used for an initial period after you become resident, but you then generally have to exchange for a Spanish licence — and a straightforward exchange depends on whether Spain has a recognition agreement with your country. Tourists and non-residents can drive on a valid foreign licence (with an International Driving Permit where required) for visits.
Four things must be in order: valid (compulsory) motor insurance, a current ITV roadworthiness test once the car is old enough, the annual municipal road tax (IVTM) paid, and ownership correctly registered in your name at the DGT. Missing any can bring fines or worse — driving uninsured is a serious offence. Each is covered in detail in our dedicated guides on insurance, the ITV, road tax and buying/selling.
Spain enforces road rules through monetary fines (multas) and licence points, and many offences carry both. Fines usually offer a prompt-payment discount (often around half) if paid quickly, but can be appealed within tight deadlines. The points permit gives each driver a balance that's deducted for offences; lose them all and you lose your licence, with recovery courses available. Ignoring a fine notification in Spanish is a common, costly mistake.
It requires a formal transfer of ownership (transferencia) through the DGT, for which you need an NIE. There are real risks if done badly: a buyer can inherit the previous owner's debts, fines or outstanding finance, and a seller who doesn't properly notify the transfer can remain liable for the new owner's later fines and road tax. These transactions are routinely handled by a gestoría, with the checks that protect you — see our buying and selling guides.
Most traffic matters are administrative (a fine and possibly points), but serious offences cross into criminal law — drink- and drug-driving above defined limits, grossly excessive speed, driving without ever having held a licence or while banned, and reckless driving causing danger. These can mean a criminal record, driving bans and even prison, handled in the criminal courts. If accused of one, get prompt legal advice rather than handling it alone.
Unresolved fines can escalate, with the loss of the prompt-payment discount, surcharges, and ultimately enforcement against your assets or accounts. If you've received a fine you didn't respond to, it's worth getting advice quickly on where it stands and whether anything can still be done — sometimes there are grounds to challenge it (for example improper notification of a non-resident), and even where not, regularising it before it escalates further limits the cost. Our traffic fines guide covers the options.
Only for a limited period. A foreign-registered car (UK, etc.) can generally be used in Spain only for a defined time; once you become resident, you're typically required to import and re-register it (with the matriculación tax and Spanish plates) rather than keep it on foreign plates indefinitely. Driving a foreign-plated car beyond the permitted period as a resident can bring penalties. Our importing-a-car guide covers the re-registration process.
Yes. Most vehicle matters — transfer of ownership when buying or selling, keeping the ITV, road tax and registration current, and dealing with fines and appeals — are administrative-legal tasks our English-speaking gestoría and legal team handle for expats. For serious driving offences in the criminal courts, we provide legal representation. The aim is to take the Spanish-language bureaucracy and risk off your hands. Book a consultation for help with any driving or vehicle matter.