Every summer the same question reaches hotel concierges: "Should I rent a car or book private transfers?". Until recently, the answer mostly depended on budget and willingness to drive. In 2026 that's changed. Two legal shifts between 2024 and 2025 have rewritten the maths in a concrete way. This guide runs the numbers honestly — not as a sales pitch but so you can choose with data.
The big one: Spain's 2025 alcohol law
From 2025, Spain's DGT dropped the legal blood-alcohol limit for drivers to 0.2 g/L (0.1 mg/L breath). In practice this is zero tolerance: a single 330 ml beer puts an average-weight driver over the limit for the next two to three hours. A glass of wine at dinner, same.
Fines are aggressive — up to €1,000 — plus licence points. Above 0.5 g/L (the old standard limit) it becomes a criminal offence: road-safety crime under the penal code. And Ibiza's Guardia Civil checkpoints in summer are systematic at club-exit junctions: the Playa d'en Bossa roundabout, the San Rafael crossroads (next to DC10, UNVRS, Amnesia), the coastal San Antonio exit.
This rewrites the rental-car maths for anyone who has even a vague intention of drinking wine at dinner or having a drink on a terrace. It's not exaggeration: the only legally safe way to dine at Atzaró or have drinks at Ibiza Town port is to not be the driver.
The second change: Ibiza's vehicle cap law
Since 2024 the Balearic government enforces a daily cap on vehicles circulating in Ibiza: 20,168 private cars, 16,000 rentals and 4,048 motorhomes. The aim is to cut congestion and environmental impact. The practical knock-on:
- Rental car bookings now close weeks in advance in July and August. Showing up at the airport with no reservation and expecting to find a car is no longer viable.
- Prices rose accordingly. In August 2025 a basic compact for a week is around €700–900.
- Hotels report their occupancy to authorities so the cap is enforced — meaning a large group can't just land and rent multiple cars without prior approval.
Parking at clubs and restaurants
Ibiza's clubbing logistics were never car-friendly. Major clubs lack meaningful own-parking:
- Pacha: adjacent paid parking charges €15–25 per session and fills early. Most people park 600–800 metres away and walk in.
- Ushuaïa / Hï: shared parking in Playa d'en Bossa, saturated by 22:00 on weekends.
- UNVRS / Amnesia / DC10 (San Rafael): free parking exists but it's chaotic — exit at 06:00 after a session, with 3,000 people leaving and 1,500 cars, on a single secondary road, is brutal.
- Cala Jondal (Blue Marlin): the access road is narrow and partly single-lane. Sunday afternoons mean constant queue.
- Las Salinas: paid parking only, and limited.
The honest cost calculation
Common scenario: two people, five days in Ibiza, hotel in Playa d'en Bossa, plans for airport, two dinners out, two clubs and a day trip to Cala Comte.
Rental car option:
- 5-day economy rental in August: €500
- Fuel: €80
- Club parking (× 2): €50
- Dinner parking (× 2): €20
- Additional insurance (recommended): €80
- Fuel-refill surcharge at return: €30
- Total: roughly €760
Plus the unpriced cost: neither traveller can drink at the two dinners or two club nights (real legal risk). Or you book taxis for those nights — and the saving evaporates.
Private transfer option:
- Airport round trip to Playa d'en Bossa (7-seater): €60
- 2 club transfers round trip (Ushuaïa, Pacha): €200
- 2 dinners with transfer (Ibiza Town, San Josep restaurant): €100
- Cala Comte day-trip round trip: €80
- Total: roughly €440
Net difference: €320 in favour of the transfer option, before counting the real opportunity cost — not driving means both travellers can drink, rest, and make their own nighttime decisions without thinking about the ride home.
When renting a car still makes sense
To be fair: own-car isn't always the worse choice. It works in three cases:
- Long stays in rural areas: two weeks at a villa in San Joan or San Carles, where transfers are infrequent and daily journeys are short.
- Constant daytime excursions: if the plan is exploring hidden coves, hiking trails, or driving across the north of the island every day, a car offers flexibility.
- Fully alcohol-free trip: families with small children, travellers who don't go out at night, yoga retreats. No legal risk, fixed cost can be justified.
When transfer is the only sensible answer
- Any evening with plans to eat out and have drinks.
- Any club visit (all are near zones with alcohol checkpoints on the way out).
- Airport arrivals with luggage, especially in a group.
- Weddings and events where nobody wants to be the designated driver.
- Short stays (3 to 4 nights) where rental's fixed cost doesn't amortise.
For larger groups the maths is even clearer
If you're 6, 8 or 14 people, renting two or three cars multiplies the problem: two or three designated non-drinking drivers, double or triple parking cost, logistics overhead coordinating the group between vehicles. A Mercedes V-Class 7-seater or a Sprinter 14-seater with a professional chauffeur solves it with one cost, one coordination point and zero legal risk for the group.