Why hire a 9-seater or van in Spain
One vehicle for the whole group, no special licence, and - unlike most countries - a 9-seater in Spain is often cheaper to rent than a 7-seater minivan, because suppliers hold more of them.
One car for the group
Three rows seat up to nine people including the driver - the whole family or party travels together instead of in two cars.
Standard licence only
A vehicle with up to nine seats is driven on an ordinary category B car licence in Spain - no minibus or D1 permit needed.
Often cheaper than a 7-seater
Rental fleets carry more 9-seater vans than 7-seater minivans, so the larger vehicle is frequently the better-priced of the two.
At every major airport
Pick up at Madrid, Barcelona, Malaga, Alicante and Palma - the busiest hubs hold the deepest minibus stock.
Vans you get in the 9-seater class
You book a group, not a model, and receive a 9-seat passenger van of similar size. Three rows, each seating up to three. The usual models in Spain are below.
VW Caravelle / Transporter
The most common 9-seater in Spain - the passenger version of the Transporter, comfortable and easy to drive.
Mercedes Vito Tourer
The premium option in the class, with the most refinement - usually priced a step above the rest.
Renault Trafic / Opel Vivaro
Practical, widely stocked minibuses that make up much of the value end of the 9-seater fleet.
Peugeot Expert / Fiat Scudo
Compact people-carrier vans - a touch easier to park than a full-size minibus while still seating nine.
Van and minibus hire in Spain
A 9-seater is the standard answer for a large family or a group travelling together. The key point that surprises a lot of first-time renters is the licence: in Spain, and across the EU, any vehicle with up to nine seats including the driver is driven on an ordinary car licence. A minibus or D1 permit only comes into play at ten seats or more, which no rental in this class reaches. The lead driver does normally need to have held the licence for at least two years.
No special licence - up to nine seats
If you can drive a normal car, you can drive a 9-seater van in Spain. The category B licence covers it. The only practical differences are size and height - the van is longer, sits higher, and needs more room to turn and park - so allow for that in old towns and tight car parks.
Seats versus luggage
The honest limit of any people carrier is luggage, not seats. With all nine seats up, the boot behind the third row is small - fine for soft bags, not for nine hard cases. The fix is the van's own flexibility: fold or remove the rearmost seats you are not using and the load space grows quickly. This is also why a 9-seater can beat a 7-seater for a group of six or seven - you get the extra room behind the seats you actually use.
| 9-seater van | 7-seater minivan | |
|---|---|---|
| Seats | Up to 9, in three rows | 5 to 7, often a 5+2 layout |
| Licence | Standard category B | Standard category B |
| Drives like | A van - longer and higher | A large car or MPV |
| Price in Spain | Often the cheaper of the two | Sometimes dearer, lower supply |
| Best for | 6-9 people, or a group of 6 wanting luggage room | A family of 5-7 who want a car-like drive |
Booking notes
- Reserve early - minibus stock is limited and sells out faster than ordinary cars, especially in summer.
- Most are manual - automatic 9-seaters exist but are scarce; if you need one, book well ahead.
- Pick a big airport - Madrid, Barcelona, Malaga, Alicante and Palma hold the most vans.
- Mind the height - check car-park height limits, particularly under hotels and in city centres.