Why hire a 7-seater in Spain
The middle ground between a family hatchback and a full minibus - a 7-seater carries the extra passengers or the extra luggage while still driving like a normal car, on an ordinary licence.
Room for the family
Two parents and up to five children, or a group of six adults, in one vehicle - with a third row that folds away when it is not needed.
Drives like a car
Lower and narrower than a minibus, a people carrier is easier on narrow streets and in car parks while still seating seven.
Standard licence only
A 7-seater is driven on an ordinary category B car licence - no minibus permit, just a licence usually held for at least two years.
Made for island holidays
On Mallorca, Tenerife or the Costa coasts, a 7-seater takes the whole family and the beach gear without a second car.
Cars you get in the 7-seater class
The class splits into two kinds - true seven-seaters and "5+2" cars with smaller occasional rear seats. You book the group; the exact model is "or similar".
Ford Galaxy / Seat Alhambra
Full-size people carriers - all seven seats take adults, the most usable of the class for a real group of seven.
VW Touran / Ford S-Max
The 5+2 layout - five proper seats plus two smaller rear seats, best for children or short hops rather than seven adults.
Peugeot 5008 / Citroen SpaceTourer
Roomy modern MPVs and SUVs with a flexible third row and a higher driving position.
Dacia Jogger / Mercedes V-Class
The Jogger is the budget seven-seater; the V-Class is the premium end, with the most space and comfort.
People carrier rental in Spain
A 7-seater is the practical choice for a family that has outgrown a normal car. It seats more, swallows more luggage, and still parks and handles much like a large estate - which matters on the narrow streets of Spanish old towns where a full minibus is awkward. Like all rentals in this size, it is driven on a standard car licence; the lead driver usually needs to have held it for at least two years.
"5+2" is not the same as a full seven-seater
Two cars can both be listed as seven seats but mean very different things. A full-size people carrier like the Ford Galaxy or Seat Alhambra seats seven adults. A "5+2" car such as the Ford S-Max or VW Touran has five proper seats and two smaller fold-up seats in the back - fine for children or a short trip, tight for adults over a long drive. If seven grown-ups will travel regularly, ask for a full-size model rather than a 5+2.
Watch the luggage with all seven seats up
The catch with any 7-seater is space behind the third row. With all seven seats in use the boot is small - if every passenger brings a full case, you will run out of room. There are two ways round it. Pack soft holdalls rather than hard cases, or, if you will not always use the rearmost seats, consider a 9-seater van: with two seats folded it gives noticeably more load space than a packed 7-seater, and in Spain it is often no more expensive.
Before you book
- Confirm the layout - check whether the offer is a full seven-seater or a 5+2 if adults will use all the seats.
- Reserve ahead - people carriers are a smaller part of the fleet and sell out earlier than ordinary cars.
- Most are manual - automatic seven-seaters exist but are limited; book early if you need one.
- Add child seats at booking - reserve any baby or booster seats in advance rather than at the desk.