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If you're thinking of buying a car in Spain, you need to read this

The Local Spain
The Local Spain - [email protected]
If you're thinking of buying a car in Spain, you need to read this
Photos: AFP

Starting on September 1, 2018 new EU regulations on emissions mean higher prices for cars bought in Spain.

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On Saturday the EU will introduce its new rules on vehicle pollution, dubbed the Worldwide Light Test Procedure (WLTP). 

These new measuring standards for carbon emissions are meant to offer more accurate data than under the obsolete NEDC format introduced in the 1980s, which was largely discredited since in 2015 it emerged that Volkswagen found a way to cheat in emissions tests.

In a nutshell, anyone buying a car in Spain will pay on average €1,500 more if it’s deemed to be too polluting.

According to industry experts 10 to 20 percent of vehicles that previously weren’t required to pay this pollution registration tax will now have to.

The move is meant to continue discouraging Europeans from buying contaminating vehicles as the bloc aims to reduce average car emissions to 66.5 grammes of CO2 per km by 2030.

The price hike is also attributed to manufacturers having to carry out more rigorous, expensive tests on their cars under the new regulations. 

The higher registration tax fee on new cars will be from around €700 on some models to €2,000 on others. It largely depends on the car model, where it’s registered, its age and its combined CO2 emissions.

Vehicles with CO2 emissions that are less than or equal to 120 grammes per kilometer are exempt from paying the tax.

But new cars that let out between 120 g/km and 160 g/km will have to pay 4.75 percent of the vehicle’s value before taxes. 

If it is between 160 and 200 grammes of carbon dioxide per kilometer, the charge will be 9.75 percent. 

The new owners of most polluting cars of all, those with emissions greater than or equal to 200 g/km of CO2 will have to cough up 14.7 percent.

Some vehicle owners who already paid the tax on their vehicles will be subject to an add-on fee in some cases but most current car owners are exempt. 

As the emissions threshold has been dropped, Spanish vehicle associations believe the number of new cars in Spain subject to this new carbon tax will go from 25 percent under NEDC to 35-45 percent under WLTP.

The new regulations do not affect cars that have already been bought. 

 

 

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