Why choose an automatic car in Spain
Manual is the default in Spain, so an automatic is the comfortable choice for drivers who are not used to a stick shift - the catch is that there are fewer of them, so you reserve one rather than hope to find it.
Easier in traffic and hills
No clutch to manage on the steep streets of Andalusia, in city traffic, or on long climbs into the mountains.
Familiar for many visitors
Drivers from the US, Canada and Australia, where automatic is standard, can drive on holiday without re-learning a manual.
Worth reserving early
Automatics are a smaller share of the Spanish fleet and sell out in summer - booking ahead is what guarantees one.
Electric and hybrid included
The growing range of EVs and hybrids in Spain is automatic by design, so going electric also solves the gearbox question.
What comes with an automatic gearbox
Automatic is a filter across every size, not a class of its own. It is easiest to find at the big airports - Madrid, Barcelona, Malaga and Valencia hold the widest choice.
Economy automatics
Small autos such as the Fiat 500 or a VW Polo with a DSG gearbox - the budget end, but fewer in number than the manuals.
Automatic SUVs
Seat Ateca, Nissan Qashqai and similar - the most common automatic group, with space and a higher driving position.
Premium cars
Mercedes, BMW and Audi models are automatic as standard, so the premium class is almost all auto by default.
Electric & hybrid
EVs and hybrids are automatic by design - a growing choice in the cities and at the larger airports.
Are rental cars in Spain automatic?
Mostly the opposite. The large majority of rental cars in Spain are manual, and if you do not specifically ask for an automatic, the car you collect will have a manual gearbox. Automatics are available - and the choice grows every year, helped by the spread of hybrids and EVs - but they are a minority of the fleet and concentrate at the big international airports. This is the single point that catches out visitors from countries where automatic is the norm.
Because supply is lower and demand from tourists is high, an automatic costs more. As a rough guide, a manual is usually 10-20% cheaper than the same car with an automatic gearbox. The gap widens in peak season, when automatics are the first to sell out. None of this is a problem if you plan for it - the fix is simply to book early and filter for automatic from the start, rather than deciding at the desk.
"Standard" does not mean automatic in Spain
A common assumption is that the standard or default car is an automatic. In Spain it is the reverse - manual is standard and the cheaper option. If you need an automatic, select it explicitly when you book and confirm it on the rental agreement before you drive off. The transmission is set at booking, not chosen at pickup.
| Manual | Automatic | |
|---|---|---|
| Availability | The majority of the fleet, everywhere | A minority, best at big airports |
| Price | The cheaper option | Usually 10-20% more for the same car |
| Booking | Easy, even last minute | Reserve ahead; sells out in summer |
| Best for | Confident stick-shift drivers on a budget | Visitors used to automatics, hilly or city driving |
How far ahead to book
For automatic, give yourself a head start. Three to four weeks ahead is enough for most of the year; for July and August aim for two to three months, because that is when the limited automatic stock goes first. Picking up at a major airport rather than a small town desk also widens the choice. If your plans might change, look for a free-cancellation rate so you can lock in an automatic now and adjust later.
Finding one quickly
- Filter for transmission - set automatic at the start of the search so manuals drop out of the results.
- Choose a large airport - Madrid, Barcelona, Malaga and Valencia hold the deepest automatic stock.
- Consider electric or hybrid - these are automatic by default and increasingly easy to find.
- Confirm at pickup - check the agreement says automatic before you leave the lot.