Spain Locks in €60 National Transport Pass for January
Spain’s Ministry of Transport and Sustainable Mobility has confirmed that a nationwide €60 monthly travel pass will launch on 19 January 2026, with a reduced €30 tariff for people aged under 26. The product will cover Renfe’s Cercanías commuter trains, Media Distancia regional services and state-run long-distance intercity buses. Existing schemes, including the €20 Cercanías pass and free tickets for children under 15, will continue alongside it.
Transport minister Óscar Puente told broadcaster TVE that the government plans to extend the pass to metro, tram and municipal bus networks once bilateral agreements are reached with Spain’s 17 autonomous communities and local councils. A clause in the Royal Decree will allow regions to opt in when their ticketing systems are prepared, mirroring Germany’s approach with the Deutschlandticket. Until then, coverage remains limited to state-operated rail and bus modes.
Employers, relocation providers and business-travel teams have taken interest because the flat-rate model simplifies monthly budgeting and removes the need to process a volume of small rail and bus receipts. A London-based relocation firm told Global Mobility News that assignees heading to Spain typically spend around €180 a month on commuter rail in Madrid or Barcelona, so the new pass could sharply reduce outlay without changing existing reimbursement policies.
The introduction of a single pass makes regular trips between major hubs more approachable for newcomers. Madrid, Barcelona and Valencia have dense commuter belts linked by Cercanías trains, while regional links connect cities such as Zaragoza, Málaga, Seville, Bilbao and A Coruña. Beach towns, business districts and university campuses sit on the same network, bringing weekend escapes, office commutes and campus travel under one paid-up monthly ticket for those living and working in Spain.
High-speed AVE services and private coach operators fall outside the scheme for now, and Spain’s fragmented smart-card standards may slow full integration. Yet the fixed pricing, nationwide rail coverage and option for regions to join later point to a long-term shift in how domestic travel is paid for. If uptake is strong, political resistance is likely to soften and wider coverage should follow.