This would be suitable for France and Spain. I used the French Libre T and it worked fine. Makes life so much easier.Can anyone recommend something to help with payment for French and Spanish toll roads?
We will be taking the caravan with us, and don't want to arrive back home without knowing we've already paid our way.
Many thanks.
Been using it for 3 years, DB easy to set up can be used for parking as wellUlys offer a multi national toll tag that covers France, Spain and Portugal
Yes you just pay at the toll booths, some are manned and at minor exits may just be pay machines. The benefit of the tag is you just drive straight through so no queuing. But lots of French motorists just pay at the toll. A few autoroutes mainly in northern france have no booths as they use ANPR and you pay online within 72 hours. You just go on the autoroute operators website and enter your registration then pay. Google Free flow Autoroutes or SANEF.I'm not sure if anyone is still checking this feed, but what happens if you do not have a tag fitted to your car, is it just a case of using your card on a chip and pin device at the toll? I looked at the Emovis Tag and if I am reading it right, it'll cost over £20 before I even set off?
....with that itinary I wouldn't use any toll roads. You won't see much of the real France from a toll road!Thanks for all the advice. We're doing the trip over about four weeks with a few hours between each site.
Much appreciated 👍
I did that, no idea what glue the critair uses but it melts into the windscreen! Good idea ‘just in case’, though we never ventured into a monitored area.....with that itinary I wouldn't use any toll roads. You won't see much of the real France from a toll road!
I would purchase a Crit'Air sticker from the official French government website before travel as only costs €4.....may save a fine.
Le site officiel de la vignette Crit'Air (certificat qualité de l'air) - Ministère de la Transition écologique
Le seul site officiel à délivrer la vignette Crit'Air (certificat qualité de l'air), établie en fonction des émissions polluantes du véhicule.www.certificat-air.gouv.fr
When we drove through Czech Republic en route to Poland we had to stop at the border and buy a Vignette. I went to stick it to the windscreen but it had a life of its own and finished up somewhat mangled. Impossible to remove and straighten it as it just shredded. So we had to buy a replacement which second time around i applied very much more carefully. Though times have now moved on and it’s all electronic. You purchase one in a machine by entering your registration details then pay. That’s it. No physical vignette any longer, ANPR and police cars do the monitoring.I did that, no idea what glue the critair uses but it melts into the windscreen! Good idea ‘just in case’, though we never ventured into a monitored area.
John

It's a good idea to carefully check the reception opening hours for each of your booked sites. They all normally close quite firmly at lunchtime in France, and may not open again to enable checkin until later than you expect, sometimes 3pm.Thanks again for all the advice. We are travelling with two young children and the sites are all (just) booked so I'm going to have a good look at the routes to see what is best. Though the primary objective is to get to the sites sooner rather than later to set them free!