City guide

Driving in Barcelona as an expat

Barcelona is laid out on a grid (the Eixample), which makes navigation easy, but the city has Spain's most enforced low-emission zone (ZBE Rondes de Barcelona) and limited parking. Many residents in central Barcelona simply do not own a car - but if you do, here is what you need to know.

Where to take the DGT theory exam in English in Barcelona

The Barcelona provincial office and several satellite DGT centres in Catalonia offer the English-language theory exam. Catalan is also offered alongside Spanish and English; pick "Inglés" on the booking form.

Jefatura Provincial de Tráfico de Barcelona

Gran Via Corts Catalanes 184, 08038 Barcelona

Main provincial centre. Long waits for cita previa - book ahead.

DGT L'Hospitalet de Llobregat

L'Hospitalet, Barcelona metro area

Often shorter waits than the central office.

DGT Sabadell

Sabadell, Vallès Occidental

Practical for residents of the inland Vallès region.

Low-emission zone & environmental sticker

The ZBE Rondes de Barcelona is active 07:00-20:00 Mon-Fri and covers the entire area within the Ronda de Dalt and Ronda Litoral ring roads, plus much of L'Hospitalet and Esplugues. Cars without at least a "B" sticker (yellow) cannot enter without paying a daily authorisation. Foreign-plated vehicles must register on the city portal - there is no grace period.

Parking - what to expect

Almost all central Barcelona parking is blue or green zone. Green (residential) is much cheaper for locals with a permit and effectively non-viable for visitors. The AreaDUM app handles parking. Public underground car parks (BSM, SABA) are reliable but cost €3-€4 per hour.

Common mistakes expats make in Barcelona

  • Driving into the ZBE before checking the sticker - even rentals are caught.
  • Parking in green zone overnight without a residential permit.
  • Trying to turn left across a tram line on Diagonal or Gran Via - heavy fines.
  • Underestimating the time the AP-7 takes to reach the airport at rush hour.

Finding an English-speaking driving school

Bilingual autoescuelas exist around Eixample, Gràcia and Sant Gervasi - and increasingly Sant Andreu and Poblenou. Some specialise in expat students and book the exam at L'Hospitalet to reduce wait times.

Local driving questions - Barcelona

Are road signs in Barcelona in Catalan or Spanish?

Both, but predominantly Catalan within the metropolitan area. "Sortida" (Catalan) means "exit", "Stop" is the same in both. Signs on the AP-7 and other state-managed motorways are bilingual. The DGT exam can be taken in Catalan, Spanish or English.

How do I get a moratorium for an old car without a sticker?

Barcelona allows up to 24 daily authorisations per vehicle per year for non-stickered cars via the registreambzbe.cat portal - about 2 per month. After exhausting them you cannot enter the ZBE during enforcement hours.

Can I park free anywhere in central Barcelona?

Effectively no - almost the entire Eixample, Born, Gràcia, Sant Antoni and Poble Sec are blue or green zone. Free streets exist in outer barrios like Horta or Sant Andreu but require a 30-minute walk to the centre.

What is the speed limit on Barcelona's Rondes ring road?

Generally 80 km/h, dropping to 60 km/h in sections near urban exits. Variable speed limits apply during high pollution episodes - electronic signs override the fixed limit and are enforced by camera.

Is the AP-7 toll road around Barcelona still tolled?

No - tolls on the AP-7 between La Jonquera and Tarragona were removed on 1 September 2021. The road remains a motorway but no charge applies for the Barcelona section. Some short Catalan-managed sections still have tolls; signage indicates them.

Other city guides

Last updated: 2026-05-17.