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Low-emission zones in Spain — urban environmental restrictions

Umweltzone Pamplona 2026 — green sticker, fines and map of the low-emission zone

Map of the Pamplona low-emission zone (Umweltzone) introduced in 2024, the required green Plakette, exemption rules and €100 fine for entry without a valid sticker. Find out which vehicles can drive in central Pamplona in 2026.

Pamplona Umweltzone — key facts at a glance

In effect since
2024
Operating hours
Mon–Fri 8:00–20:00
Required sticker
DGT B or better
Fine for non-compliance
200 · Art. 76 Ley sobre Tráfico
Operated by
Iruñeko Udala — Movilidadopen official portal

Detailed boundary data for this city is not yet in our map. Use the city portal to check the exact perimeter.

DGT Distintivo Ambiental rules for Pamplona — which stickers may enter

Inside the Pamplona ZBE, only vehicles with a DGT Distintivo Ambiental B or better are allowed. Older or unstickered vehicles face a €200 fine per offence (Ley sobre Tráfico Art. 76, reduced to €100 with prompt payment). Enforcement via ANPR cameras.

DGT DistintivoEligible vehiclesAllowed in Pamplona
Distintivo 0 (blue)100% electric / hydrogen / plug-in hybrid >40km autonomy✓ Yes
Distintivo ECO (green/blue)Hybrids, CNG, LPG, plug-in hybrid <40km autonomy✓ Yes
Distintivo C (green)Petrol Euro 4+, diesel Euro 6✓ Yes
Distintivo B (yellow)Petrol Euro 3, diesel Euro 4-5✓ Yes
Sin distintivoPetrol pre-Euro 3, diesel pre-Euro 4, unclassified✗ No· €200 fine

The DGT Distintivo Ambiental is free for vehicles that qualify by registration. Buy adhesive sticker at any Correos office, ITV station, or order online via the official DGT portal sede.dgt.gob.es for around €5. Foreign-registered vehicles must visit Spain to apply — bring vehicle registration certificate (Permiso de Circulación equivalent). For tourist visits, foreign plates are still subject to ZBE rules and may need temporary online authorisation per city.

Frequently asked questions about green zones in Germany

Plakette rules, fines, exemptions, foreign-registered cars and the Diesel-Fahrverbot — everything tourists and residents need to know before driving into a German Umweltzone.

  • What is a Spanish ZBE (Zona de Bajas Emisiones)?

    A Spanish ZBE (Zona de Bajas Emisiones) is an urban low-emission zone where only vehicles with a valid DGT environmental sticker (Distintivo Ambiental) may enter. Mandated by Ley 7/2021 de Cambio Climático for every Spanish city >50,000 population by 1 January 2023. As of 2026, 140+ Spanish cities operate ZBE: Madrid (with sub-zones Madrid Central/Plaza Elíptica/M-30), Barcelona Rondas (largest, 95 km²), Valencia, Sevilla, Zaragoza, Málaga, Bilbao, Granada, Vitoria-Gasteiz, Pamplona, Salamanca, Santander, Córdoba, Pontevedra (pioneer since 1999) and Toledo. Each city sets its own minimum sticker threshold.

  • How does the DGT Distintivo Ambiental system work?

    The DGT Distintivo Ambiental (Certificado Ambiental) classifies vehicles into 5 categories by Euro emission class: - 0 emisiones (blue): 100% electric, hydrogen, plug-in hybrid >40 km - ECO (green/blue): hybrids, CNG, LPG, plug-in hybrid <40 km - C (green): petrol Euro 4+, diesel Euro 6 - B (yellow): petrol Euro 3, diesel Euro 4-5 - Sin distintivo: older — typically banned from most ZBE Lower category = stricter = more cities allow you in.

  • How to buy the DGT environmental sticker?

    The DGT Distintivo Ambiental is free for vehicles that qualify by registration. Three ways to obtain: 1. Correos office: pay only sticker production fee (~€5) 2. ITV inspection centre: included with periodic inspection 3. Online via DGT: through sede.dgt.gob.es with digital certificate Required documents: Permiso de Circulación (vehicle registration certificate). Foreign-registered cars must visit Spain to apply, OR can use a temporary online authorisation per city for tourist visits.

  • What is the fine for entering ZBE without authorisation?

    Standard fine is €200 for ZBE violations (Ley sobre Tráfico Art. 76, third-class infraction). Reduced to €100 if paid within 20 days. May rise to €300+ if unpaid beyond 60 days. Most major ZBE use ANPR cameras (lectura automática de matrículas) for automatic enforcement. Madrid 360 system has 200+ cameras; Barcelona has similar coverage. Foreign-registered vehicles are not exempt — fines are issued cross-border under EU Directive 2015/413 (CBE) and arrive by post 4-6 weeks later. Many tourists discover ZBE fines months after returning home.

  • Which vehicles are exempt from ZBE rules?

    Permanently exempt from ZBE access restrictions (no Distintivo needed): - Emergency services (Policía, Bomberos, ambulancias) - Vehicles for disabled persons with Tarjeta de Estacionamiento - Vehicles with historical-vehicle status (>30 years) - Public transport buses (M2/M3) in regular service - Military and diplomatic vehicles Residents can apply for temporary exemptions (autorizaciones temporales) at the local Ayuntamiento — usually for specific dates, medical appointments, or moving house. Motorcycles and electric scooters typically follow the same DGT scheme as cars.

  • I drive a foreign-registered car — do I need a Distintivo Ambiental?

    Yes — there is no foreign-vehicle exemption. Cars with French, Portuguese, Italian, German, British, Polish, Ukrainian or any non-Spanish plates need to comply with ZBE rules. Three ways to comply: 1. Temporary online authorisation via the city portal (Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia etc.) — usually free, requires vehicle registration data, valid for the trip duration. 2. Visit Spain to get a permanent Distintivo — applies only if you frequently travel; bring Permiso de Circulación equivalent. 3. Park outside ZBE — use park-and-ride (P+R) lots with metro/bus to centre. Foreign plates are read by ANPR cameras like Spanish ones. Cross-border fine collection via EU Directive 2015/413 (CBE) is well-established for Spain.