Why a budget car works in Spain
The mini, economy and compact groups are the cheapest way to drive in Spain - small petrol cars that are easy to park, cheap to fuel and still allowed in every city centre.
Lowest daily rate
Economy and mini cars are the bottom of the price list - manual gearbox, small engine, lowest insurance band.
Cheap to fuel
A small petrol engine like the Fiat Panda's returns well over 50 mpg, so a week of driving costs very little in fuel.
Easy to park
Narrow old-town streets and tight underground bays suit a supermini far better than an SUV or a people carrier.
City-centre ready
Spanish rental cars are new enough to carry a DGT green sticker, so even a budget car can drive into Madrid and Barcelona.
Cars you get in the budget class
Rates are quoted as a group, not a fixed model - you book "Fiat Panda or similar" and receive a car of the same size. The most common budget models in Spain are below.
Fiat Panda / Fiat 500
Mini group, 4 seats, around a 220-litre boot - room for two large cases. The cheapest and most-booked car in Spain.
Seat Ibiza / Ford Fiesta
Economy supermini, five doors, more rear-seat room and a bigger boot than the mini group for a small step up in price.
VW Polo / Opel Corsa
Compact and comfortable enough for longer motorway runs, while still cheap to run and simple to park.
Citroen C3 / Renault Clio
Five-seat economy hatchbacks - the sensible pick for three or four adults on a city or coastal trip.
How to get the cheapest car hire in Spain
Budget car rental in Spain means the mini, economy and compact groups - small petrol hatchbacks with a manual gearbox. Manual is the default here, and choosing it is the single biggest saving you can make: the same car with an automatic gearbox usually costs 10-20% more. Booking a few weeks ahead matters too, because the cheapest groups are the first to sell out in summer and prices climb as availability drops.
The headline price is rarely the price you pay. The two things that change the real cost are the deposit and the insurance. A standard cheap rate holds a deposit on a credit card and leaves you liable for the excess if anything happens. A no-deposit rate folds full insurance into the price, so nothing is blocked on your card and small scratches are already covered - which also solves the common problem that most suppliers will not accept a debit card on a standard rate.
A cheap rental still enters the low-emission zones
Madrid (Madrid 360) and Barcelona (ZBE Rondes) ban older cars from the centre, with fines of around 200 euros. This worries a lot of visitors, but it is not a problem with a hire car: every car in a Spanish rental fleet already carries the correct DGT environmental sticker, so the right category is assigned automatically. You do none of the registration paperwork a private foreign car would need - just check the green or blue label is on the windscreen before you leave the lot.
When a budget car is the right choice
A small economy car is the obvious pick for a city break, a short coastal trip, or driving on the islands, where roads are narrow and parking is tight. Two adults with cabin bags fit easily; a couple with a child and one large case still manage. Where it falls short is four or five adults with full luggage, or long, fully loaded motorway hauls in summer heat - for those, a compact SUV or an estate is worth the extra few euros a day.
Where the cheapest deals are
- Alicante - one of the largest and most competitive rental markets in Spain, often the lowest rates on the mainland.
- Malaga (AGP) - high supply across the Costa del Sol keeps the economy groups cheap.
- The islands - on Mallorca, Ibiza and the Canaries small cars dominate, but summer supply is capped, so book early.
- Off-season - November to February rates are a fraction of July and August.