- Automatic
- Diesel · 2.1L
- 5 seats
- 3 bags
- 2007
데니아 렌터카 가격 비교와 픽업·보험 정보를 한곳에.
No-deposit options
About a third of cars in Spain come with no deposit hold at pickup - look for the "No deposit" badge.
Full insurance
Zero-excess cover available on most cars - nothing taken from the deposit if something happens.
Airport & city pickup
Desks at the airport and in the city centre.
Free cancellation
Cancel free on most bookings, often up to 48 hours before pickup.
Most driving here is short coast hops plus the odd run inland or up to an airport. Pick by group size and distance, not by looks.
Economy
Cheap to run and easy to park near the marina and old town. Fine for two people.
Automatic
Easier on the climbs up to Montgo and the Jalon Valley. Automatics are limited in Spain, so book early.
7-seater & van
For families or two couples sharing, with room for luggage on the airport run.
Luxury
For the coast road in something better appointed. Deposits run higher on premium groups.
Denia sits on the Costa Blanca about halfway between Alicante and Valencia, with neither airport on its doorstep. That is the main reason to rent: the town centre and beach areas are very walkable, but for longer distances or beaches further along the coast you need other options. A hire car is what turns Denia from a one-town stay into a base for the whole Marina Alta.
The other reason is the spread of things to reach. Denia has about 20 km of its own coastline, from the sandy Las Marinas strip north of town to the rocky coves of Las Rotas under the mountain, plus the Montgo Natural Park behind it. A car lets you move between them on your own schedule rather than a bus timetable.
Payment and deposit
When you book you pay only a small upfront amount - usually 15-20% of the hire cost. The rest is settled at the desk on pickup. The deposit in most cases is fully refundable, and about a third of cars in Spain are handed over with no deposit at all - those are marked in the results. If you only have a debit card, pick a no-deposit rate or a cash-deposit option: nothing gets frozen on your card.
Javea is only about 11 kilometres away, around 15 minutes on the CV-736 over the shoulder of Montgo, the closest neighbour for a beach or a meal. Calpe, with its landmark rock, is about 25 kilometres down the coast, roughly half an hour. Inland, the Jalon Valley is about a half-hour drive for wineries and weekend markets in the hill villages.
For the bigger cities, Denia has easy access to both Alicante Airport, about an hour by car, and Valencia Airport, about an hour and ten minutes, both via the AP-7 motorway. Javea, Calpe and Alicante each have their own page. The point for Denia is that one pickup reaches all of them and you can be back the same day.
Day trips within reach
Denia is the closest mainland point to Ibiza and Formentera, and Balearia runs the route between Denia and Ibiza with an average of seven weekly sailings and roughly one a day. The crossing to Ibiza takes around 2 hours 15 minutes. The passenger terminal sits in the centre, a short walk or a free shuttle boat from the old town.
One Denia-specific point: most suppliers do not allow you to put their hire car on the ferry to the islands. If your plan is to take a vehicle across, you usually need to book a car already on Ibiza instead, or check with the supplier in writing first. Foot passengers are fine - park in town and walk on.
Denia has no airport of its own, so town and port pickups are the local choice, with the cheapest rates usually at Alicante or Valencia airport if you are flying in. In and around the town, names to look for include Goldcar and Centauro. Whichever you choose, an no-deposit rate with full cover built in avoids a deposit hold.
Denia has no low-emission zone, so there is no sticker rule to worry about here. The old town streets are narrow and parking near the marina fills up in summer, so a smaller car is easier to place - use the larger car parks at the edge of the centre and walk in.
Spring (March to May) and autumn (late September into October) are the easiest times to drive - warm, with quieter roads and a sea still warm enough to swim in autumn. July and August are the peak: prices climb, automatics and 7-seaters go first, and the town fills for the July patron fiestas and the August Moors and Christians, so book several weeks ahead. The town sees sun around 320 days a year, so winter is the cheapest stretch and a car still makes sense for the inland trips once the beach season is over.
Usually no. Most suppliers do not allow their cars on the Balearia ferry to the islands. If you want a car on Ibiza, book one there instead, or check with your supplier in writing before you travel.
Foot passengers can park in town and walk onto the ferry.
Denia has no airport of its own. Alicante Airport is about an hour away by car and Valencia Airport about an hour and ten minutes, both via the AP-7 motorway.
Picking the car up at the airport is usually the cheapest option if you are flying in.
A credit card is not always required - it is needed to hold the security deposit. At pickup the supplier freezes the deposit amount on the card: the money is not charged and is released when you return the car undamaged.
Without a credit card you still have options: choose a cash-payment rate (the «Cash» filter option) or a no-deposit rate, and nothing is held.
The deposit is an amount the rental company holds as a guarantee for the car. Road fines or damage can be deducted from it.
If the car comes back without problems, the deposit is released in full. It is a temporary hold on your card, not a charge.
It depends on the car class and the supplier - you can see the exact amount on each car's card.
You can set a maximum deposit in the filter and the catalogue shows only matching offers. The lower you set it, the fewer cars remain.
Yes. To see cars with no deposit, use the «No deposit» filter option. There are also cars with a small deposit or cash payment.
Note that "no deposit" means no hold at pickup, not no booking payment - a small upfront amount is still taken when you book. If nothing suits, contact our support team.
The deposit is the amount frozen on your card at pickup and released when you return the car undamaged.
The excess is the part of any damage you pay yourself even with insurance - anything above it is covered by the insurer.
In practice, damage is taken from the deposit up to the excess, so the deposit is often set to match it. A full, zero-excess policy removes both: you do not pay for damage and the hold is usually waived.
Cover comes in levels:
You see the available rates on each car's card when booking.
If you would rather not depend on the deposit and excess, choose the full rate.
Yes, some cars can be paid in cash - use the «Cash» filter option.
You pay a small upfront amount by debit or credit card when booking (usually 15-20% of the total), and the rest in cash at pickup.
Yes, paying for the car with cryptocurrency is possible - contact our support team to arrange it.
Cross-border trips must be agreed with the supplier in advance. There may be a small service fee and extra insurance.
To see cars allowed across the border, use the filter option or contact our support team. Do not cross the border undeclared.
Yes. In the search, set a pick-up and a drop-off point - for example collect in Denia and return in Javea, Alicante or Valencia.
By default the car is returned to the same place you collected it.
Most are manual, as across Spain. Automatics cost more and sell out first, especially in summer, so book one early if you need it - it makes the climbs up to Montgo and the Jalon Valley easier.
You need a passport, a driving licence and the rental voucher - the voucher can be shown on your phone or tablet.
It states the final price with your chosen options and insurance, so the amount due at the desk will not change.
To hire through our rental companies you need at least 2 years of driving experience.