New Sticker and Beacon Rules Mean Fresh Fines for UK Drivers in France and Spain
Millions of British families will load up the car and head for the Continent this summer, and two small pieces of kit now stand between a smooth trip and an on the spot fine. In France, you need a Crit’Air clean air sticker to enter most cities. In Spain, the familiar red warning triangle has been retired and replaced by a connected emergency beacon known as the V-16. Get either wrong and you can be stopped and penalised by police or caught by camera, with fines reaching 180 euros in France and 200 euros in Spain. Here is exactly what has changed, who is affected, and how to make sure your car is legal before you board the ferry or the shuttle.
France: the Crit’Air sticker nearly every city now demands
A Crit’Air vignette is a coloured disc that identifies how clean your vehicle is, based on its Euro emissions standard. There are six categories, from a green sticker for zero emission cars down to a grey sticker for the oldest diesels. It is displayed on the right hand side of the windscreen and lasts the lifetime of the car. The point of the system is to let French towns and cities restrict the dirtiest vehicles from their low emission zones, either permanently during set hours or on days when pollution spikes.
The list of places that require one has grown long, and now covers most major destinations including Paris, Lyon, Marseille, Nice, Bordeaux, Lille, Strasbourg, Toulouse, Montpellier, Nantes and Reims. Inside central Paris the rules are the tightest in the country. Only vehicles with the cleanest stickers are allowed in between 8am and 8pm on weekdays, and all diesel cars are now banned from the central zone. Older cars are shut out altogether. Vehicles registered before 1997, and motorbikes and scooters registered before June 2000, cannot get a sticker at all and are not permitted in restricted zones.
Driving in a restricted zone without the correct vignette makes you liable for a fine of between 68 and 180 euros. The sticker itself is cheap, costing 3.85 euros within France, with international postage to the UK starting from around 5.11 euros. The catch is time. A Crit’Air sticker can take up to six weeks to arrive, so this is not something to leave until the week before you travel. Order it from the official French government site at certificat-air.gouv.fr and nowhere else. The French authorities have warned about copycat websites that charge unsuspecting drivers far more than the real price.
Spain: the V-16 beacon that replaced the warning triangle
Spain has made an even bigger change. From 1 January 2026, the red warning triangles that drivers have carried for decades are no longer accepted for breakdowns on Spanish roads. In their place, every vehicle, including those registered abroad, must carry a working V-16 emergency beacon. This is a small flashing light that sits on the roof of the car and is visible from a distance, allowing you to signal a breakdown without leaving the vehicle and stepping into traffic. The safety logic is simple, as standing on a hard shoulder to place a triangle is one of the most dangerous things a driver can do.
There is an important detail that trips people up. To be valid in 2026, the V-16 must be a connected model that links to Spain’s DGT traffic platform and reports the location of your stranded car automatically. Cheaper, non connected beacons sold in previous years no longer meet the standard. Driving without a compliant V-16 can bring a fine of between 80 and 200 euros. If you are buying one, check it is a DGT approved connected device rather than a basic flashing light, and make sure it is charged and accessible before you set off rather than buried in the boot.
The rest of your European driving kit
The sticker and the beacon sit alongside the kit British drivers have long needed abroad. Your car must display a UK identifier, the sticker that replaced the old GB plate, unless your number plate already includes the UK mark with no flag. You need headlamp beam deflectors or a manual headlight adjustment so your lights do not dazzle oncoming traffic on the right. France still requires you to carry a warning triangle and reflective jackets for everyone in the car, kept inside the cabin rather than the boot so you can put them on before getting out. Carrying a spare set of bulbs is also advised.
You will also need your full driving licence, the V5C logbook for your car, and proof of insurance. Crossing the border itself has changed too. New EU biometric entry checks are now in force at the Channel, and you can read what that means for queues and what to expect in our guide on the new EU border checks now live for drivers crossing the Channel. For a full run through of the documents and equipment to pack, see our checklist on what every UK driver taking their car to Europe needs to carry.
What to do before you travel
Start with the Crit’Air sticker, because the lead time is the longest. Apply online at the official French government site at least six weeks before departure, using a photo of your V5C, and choose the category that matches your car’s emissions standard. Next, buy a DGT approved connected V-16 beacon for Spain if your route takes you there, and test it works. Pack your warning triangle and reflective jackets for France, fit your headlamp deflectors, and add a UK identifier if your plate does not carry one. Finally, check whether your route passes through any other low emission zones, as cities in Spain, Italy and Germany run their own schemes with separate requirements.
It is also worth arranging European breakdown cover before you leave, since a recovery abroad without it can run to thousands of pounds. None of this is expensive on its own, but the fines for getting caught out add up quickly and can sour the start of a holiday. A little preparation in the weeks before you travel keeps the trip on the right side of the law and the hard shoulder behind you.
France and Spain are not the only countries running access restrictions. Many Italian cities operate limited traffic zones known as ZTLs that fine drivers who enter without a permit, and German cities require an Umweltplakette environmental sticker to drive in their low emission zones. If your route crosses several countries, check the requirements for each one before you set off, because a sticker valid in one nation will not cover you in another. Build the lead times into your planning, particularly the six weeks a Crit’Air sticker can take to arrive, so that paperwork rather than traffic is never the thing that delays your departure.
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