Car Insurance for Expats in Mallorca

Car Insurance for Expats in Mallorca

A practical guide to Spanish car insurance for expats on Mallorca. We cover the three core cover levels (third-party / terceros, third-party plus, fully comprehensive / todo riesgo), Mallorca-specific considerations including the Palma traffic environment, Tramuntana road conditions, no-claims bonus transfer from UK and other home countries, English / German-language policy availability, the rule that Spanish-plated cars must be insured with a Spanish authorised insurer, and what to do if you become Spanish resident with a foreign-registered vehicle. Cover, pricing, acceptance and documentation depend on insurer, age, licence history, vehicle, region and personal circumstances. We don’t compare or recommend competitor insurers on this page; we explain the insurance considerations based on your situation, in plain English, seven days a week.

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Who this page is for

If you’re a Mallorca resident with a Spanish-plated car, or arriving with a foreign-registered vehicle, this page covers the practical car insurance considerations that come up most often. It’s written for:

  • New Mallorca residents buying their first Spanish-plated car
  • UK movers transferring no-claims history with an official UK certificate
  • German, Scandinavian and other Northern European movers arranging NCB transfer from home insurers
  • Existing residents at policy anniversary considering a switch between insurers
  • Palma central residents weighing windscreen / glass / mirror cover for narrow-street parking
  • Tramuntana and inland residents whose driving patterns include the mountain road network
  • Households with multiple named drivers, mixed ages and licence histories
  • Anyone navigating the Spanish-vs-foreign-registered vehicle compliance position

When to speak to an adviser

Straightforward third-party cover is easy to quote online. For the cases where the right answer isn’t obvious, a short adviser conversation typically saves time. Consider speaking to an adviser when:

  • You’re transferring no-claims history from a home-country insurer and want to confirm Spanish acceptance before commitment
  • You’re a Spanish resident with a foreign-registered vehicle and want clarity on the registration and insurance position
  • You hold a non-EU driving licence and need clarity on the current exchange / re-test position for your nationality
  • You drive a higher-value vehicle and want to weigh todo riesgo with or without excess
  • Your household has multiple named drivers across mixed age and licence-history profiles
  • You want English or German-language policy documents and claims support
  • You’ve had a recent claim or licence history matter affecting acceptance
  • You want clarity on Tramuntana driving cover and towing-cover position

Our English-speaking advisers work with Mallorca residents on car insurance every week and can confirm the NCB transfer position with specific insurers before you commit. You can request a quote online or call — the conversation typically takes 10–15 minutes.

Why this matters on Mallorca

Mallorca’s car insurance considerations for expats are largely the same as mainland Spain, but with some island-specific factors:

  • Substantial year-round expat population means established English and German-language insurer support
  • Older expats and seasonal residents frequently consider Spanish-plated second vehicles for their Mallorca residence
  • The Tramuntana mountain roads create specific accident-risk considerations
  • Palma city centre’s narrow streets and parking challenges affect cover preferences (windscreen / glass / mirror cover meaningful)
  • Rental from mainland Spain to Mallorca with vehicles is logistically uncommon — most Mallorca residents have locally-registered vehicles

Cover levels

Third-party (terceros)

The minimum legal cover. Covers third-party liability only — not your own vehicle damage. Common for older / lower-value cars.

Third-party plus (terceros ampliado)

Adds selected own-vehicle benefits: typically fire, theft, glass breakage, vandalism. Mid-tier popular for mid-value vehicles.

Fully comprehensive (todo riesgo)

Third-party plus full own-vehicle accidental damage cover. Available with excess (todo riesgo con franquicia) or without (sin franquicia). Standard for newer vehicles and those under finance.

Spanish plates rule

Spanish-registered (Spanish-plated) vehicles must be insured with a Spanish authorised (DGSFP-regulated) insurer. Driving a Spanish-plated car on a foreign insurance policy is not valid. All Mallorca residents who own a Spanish-plated car need Spanish car insurance.

Becoming Spanish resident with foreign-plated car

If you become Spanish resident with a foreign-registered vehicle, the registration and insurance position should be checked immediately. Time limits and enforcement can depend on residency status, vehicle origin and customs position. Driving a foreign-plated vehicle as a Spanish resident raises specific compliance questions that should be addressed promptly. Many Mallorca expats register the car on Spanish plates relatively soon after establishing residency to simplify insurance and avoid the cross-border compliance question.

Driving licence requirements

EU/EEA driving licences are recognised. UK post-Brexit licence reciprocity has been subject to negotiation — check the current UK-Spain position before assuming UK licence validity beyond the typical window before the current Spanish licence rules apply. Non-EU licences typically require exchange or re-test depending on bilateral agreements. An IDP may be useful temporarily, but it does not replace checking the current Spanish licence rules for your nationality.

No-claims bonus transfer

Spanish insurers operate a bonus/penalty system based on claim-free years. Importing a no-claims record from a home-country insurer is possible with many Spanish insurers — you need an official no-claims certificate (typically 3-5 years of evidence) translated into Spanish where required. Not all Spanish insurers accept all foreign NCB systems — this can meaningfully affect your initial premium. Verify before policy purchase if NCB transfer matters.

English / German-language policies

Several Spanish authorised insurers offer English-language policy documents, claims forms and customer service on Mallorca given the established expat population. German-language documentation is also widely accessible. Verify with the insurer for your specific situation including 24/7 emergency line language support.

Palma traffic and parking

Central Palma neighbourhoods (Casc Antic, Santa Catalina, Es Jonquet) have narrow streets and limited parking. Common cover considerations:

  • Windscreen / glass / mirror cover — minor damage frequent in narrow-street zones
  • Vandalism cover — particularly relevant for street-parked vehicles
  • Theft cover — particularly relevant for higher-value vehicles
  • Roadside assistance — valuable for in-city breakdowns

Tramuntana driving

The Serra de Tramuntana mountain roads create specific driving considerations:

  • Winding mountain routes (Palma-Sóller, Palma-Valldemossa-Deià, Pollença-Lluc)
  • Higher accident frequency on certain sections
  • Winter weather considerations (rare but occasional altitude snow at Lluc / Puig Major area)
  • Cycling tourism in spring means high cycling-traffic interaction
  • Insurance considerations for towing through Tramuntana — check your policy for towing-cover position

Claims and accidents

The European Accident Statement (Declaración Amistosa de Accidente) is the standard incident form — carry one in the car. Notify your insurer within the period specified (typically 7 days). Direct billing to authorised body shops is standard. Mallorca’s established expat market means many insurer-network body shops are familiar with English-speaking clients.

Typical costs

  • Older car, third-party only, experienced driver: EUR 250–450/year
  • Mid-range car, third-party plus: EUR 350–600/year
  • Newer car, fully comprehensive: EUR 500–1,200/year
  • Premium vehicles substantially higher
  • Premium villas / high-net-worth zones can attract slightly higher premiums based on parking situation

Costs vary by vehicle, driver age, licence history, claims history, parking situation and annual mileage. Indicative ranges only.

Practical checklist

  • Confirm vehicle registration (Spanish plates required for Spanish insurance)
  • Gather licence details for all named drivers
  • Obtain no-claims certificate from home-country insurer
  • Identify cover level appropriate for vehicle value
  • Confirm English / German-language policy availability if needed
  • Verify 24/7 emergency assistance language
  • Confirm direct-billing body shop network on Mallorca
  • Confirm windscreen / glass cover for narrow-street Palma driving
  • Activate cover before driving

Common mistakes

  • Driving a Spanish-plated car on home-country insurance (not valid)
  • Continuing to drive a foreign-plated car as a Spanish resident without checking the registration and insurance position
  • Not transferring no-claims certificate from home-country insurer
  • Buying minimum third-party on a high-value vehicle
  • Continuing to use home-country driving licence beyond IDP validity
  • Not notifying insurer within the claim window
  • Choosing very high excess that makes the cover almost worthless for typical claims
  • Buying without verifying English-language claim support
  • Forgetting windscreen / glass cover for narrow-street Palma driving

Mallorca Car Insurance Quote

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Local scenarios — three examples

Mallorca car insurance scenarios commonly involve NCB transfer from home countries, weighing cover levels by vehicle value, and addressing foreign-vehicle compliance positions. Three scenarios illustrate common patterns. Indicative only.

Scenario A — UK couple bringing 9 years of no-claims to a new Mallorca car

The couple recently bought a Spanish-plated 4-year-old hatchback for everyday Palma use. Both have 9 years of no-claims with their UK insurer (translated certificates obtained). They want fully comprehensive (todo riesgo) given vehicle value. NCB transfer is critical — not all Spanish insurers accept all foreign NCB systems equally. The conversation focuses on which Spanish insurer gives the best NCB credit. Indicative annual premium in the EUR 450–700 range subject to vehicle, drivers, claims history, parking and personal circumstances. English-language policy documents preferred.

Scenario B — German DNV applicant arriving with German-plated car

The DNV applicant arrives on Mallorca with a 2-year-old German-plated car. As a new Spanish resident with a foreign-registered vehicle, the registration and insurance position should be checked immediately. Time limits and enforcement depend on residency status, vehicle origin and customs position. Most movers in this situation register the car on Spanish plates relatively quickly — once Spanish-plated, the vehicle must be insured with a Spanish authorised insurer. The applicant’s German NCB history is typically transferable to Spanish insurers with appropriate documentation.

Scenario C — Premium villa owner with high-value vehicle in Andratx

The owner has a EUR 90,000 SUV used primarily for short trips around Andratx, Palma, and occasional Tramuntana mountain drives. Fully comprehensive sin franquicia (without excess) chosen given vehicle value. Premium roadside assistance, garage parking, single named driver. Indicative annual premium in the EUR 1,200–1,800 range subject to vehicle, claims history, parking and personal circumstances. English-language policy documents and direct billing at premium body shops important.

Choosing the right policy

What to prioritise

  • Cover level matched to vehicle value — older / low-value cars at terceros may make sense; newer / high-value cars typically warrant todo riesgo
  • NCB transfer with documented certificate from home-country insurer
  • Direct-billing body shop network on Mallorca
  • English or German-language policy documents and 24/7 emergency line if needed
  • Honest disclosure of any claims history

What not to choose on price alone

Buying minimum third-party cover on a high-value vehicle leaves you exposed to substantial own-vehicle damage costs. Very high excess sometimes makes the policy almost worthless for typical claims. Not transferring NCB means starting from base premium tier unnecessarily.

Documents and information needed for a quote

  • Vehicle make, model, year, fuel type, registration
  • Vehicle valuation (purchase price, current value)
  • Licence details for all named drivers (date, country of issue)
  • NCB certificate from home-country insurer (with Spanish translation if required)
  • Claims history for past 5 years
  • Parking situation (garage, driveway, street)
  • Annual mileage estimate

What can delay your quote or activation

  • NCB certificate translation requirements
  • Unusual vehicle modifications requiring underwriting review
  • Recent claims requiring detailed disclosure
  • Non-EU licence requiring verification of current Spanish position
  • Foreign-plated vehicle situation requiring resolution

Cover level comparison

LevelTypical featuresBest fit
Terceros (third-party)Third-party liability only. Doesn’t cover your vehicle.Older / low-value cars where comprehensive doesn’t make economic sense.
Terceros ampliado (third-party plus)Adds fire, theft, glass, vandalism.Mid-value 3–10 year-old vehicles.
Todo riesgo con franquicia (comprehensive with excess)Full own-vehicle accidental damage with excess on your-fault claims.Newer vehicles where lower premium with excess is acceptable.
Todo riesgo sin franquicia (without excess)Full own-vehicle accidental damage with no excess.High-value vehicles, premium villa owners.

Indicative only. Verify specific policy features with insurer.

Driving in Palma, the Tramuntana, north coast or south-west?

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Common questions answered in depth

How does UK no-claims bonus transfer actually work?

You request a no-claims bonus certificate from your UK insurer — an official document showing the number of consecutive claim-free years (typically expressed as a percentage discount or years). The certificate is usually translated into Spanish where required. You provide it to your prospective Spanish insurer at quote stage. Spanish insurers vary in how they credit foreign NCB — some give full credit equivalent to their internal years, others give partial credit, others require a brief Spanish-driving period before recognition. The practical effect on premium can be substantial. Verify NCB credit position with specific Spanish insurers before commitment.

What about the foreign-vehicle position?

If you become Spanish resident with a foreign-registered vehicle, the registration and insurance position should be checked immediately. Time limits and enforcement can depend on residency status, vehicle origin and customs position. Driving a Spanish-registered vehicle without Spanish insurance is not valid; driving a foreign-plated vehicle as a Spanish resident raises specific compliance questions that should be addressed promptly. Most Mallorca expats register the car on Spanish plates relatively soon after establishing residency to simplify insurance and avoid cross-border compliance questions. The plates-change process involves DGT registration, vehicle inspection (ITV), customs / tax considerations and obtaining Spanish insurance.

Why does parking situation affect premium?

Insurers price risk based on the likelihood of theft, vandalism and minor damage claims. Garage-parked vehicles have lower theft / minor-damage risk than street-parked vehicles in central Palma narrow-street zones. Driveway-parked vehicles fall in between. Honest disclosure of parking situation matters — misdeclaration affects claim acceptance.

What happens at an accident on Mallorca?

Use the European Accident Statement (Declaración Amistosa de Accidente) — carry one in the car. Complete with the other driver at the scene including positions of vehicles, registration plates, drivers and insurance details. Take photographs of vehicles, registration plates, scene, road conditions and any visible injuries. Notify your insurer within the policy window (typically 7 days). Direct billing arrangements with authorised body shops are standard — the insurer-network body shop typically handles repair without out-of-pocket payment from you.

Do I need separate motorbike insurance?

Yes — motorbikes need a dedicated motorbike policy with similar structure (third-party / plus / comprehensive). The motorbike insurance product is regulated separately. If you own both car and motorbike, both need their own policies.

FAQs

Do I need Spanish car insurance on Mallorca?

Yes — if you own a Spanish-plated vehicle. Spanish-plated cars must be insured with a Spanish authorised insurer.

Can I keep my UK car insurance for my Mallorca vehicle?

If the car is Spanish-plated, no. UK car insurance doesn’t cover Spanish-plated vehicles.

What about a foreign-plated car?

If you’re Spanish resident with a foreign-registered vehicle, the registration and insurance position should be checked immediately. Time limits and enforcement depend on residency status, vehicle origin and customs position.

Can I transfer my UK no-claims bonus?

Often yes — with an official no-claims certificate from your UK insurer. Not all Spanish insurers accept all foreign NCB systems — verify before purchase.

Are English-language policies available on Mallorca?

Yes — widely available given the established expat community. German-language also accessible.

What about windscreen cover for narrow Palma streets?

Glass / mirror cover is often included in third-party plus and todo riesgo. Verify with insurer.

What is todo riesgo?

Fully comprehensive — covers third-party plus all own-vehicle accidental damage. Available with or without excess.

How does NCB work in Spain?

Spanish insurers operate a bonus/penalty system based on claim-free years. Discounts build up; claims reset back.

What about Tramuntana driving?

Winding mountain roads have specific accident-risk profile. Comprehensive cover often appropriate for Tramuntana-based residents who frequently drive the mountain routes.

What happens at an accident?

Use the European Accident Statement (Declaración Amistosa). Notify insurer within the policy window (typically 7 days). Direct billing to authorised body shops.

Can I add my partner as named driver?

Yes — named drivers are standard. Pricing reflects their licence and claims history.

What about renting a car?

Rental car insurance is provided by the rental company. As a Mallorca resident with a Spanish-plated own vehicle, you typically use rental insurance for rental occasions.

247 Expat Insurance — Car Insurance for Expats in Mallorca

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