Sadlonelygit wrote: ↑Sun Jul 28, 2024 8:15 am
So you're saying that a Spanish license isn't accepted in the UK, and that UK insurance isn't valid in the Canaries?
There's a couple of different points. When you become a Spanish resident you get something like 180 days to exchange your UK license for a Spanish one. A vehicle on foreign plates is only allowed in the country for 180 days, after that time you're supposed to re-register it onto Spanish plates. So in theory a Spanish resident can own a non-Spanish vehicle, but only while it's being swapped to Spanish plates. The difficult bit is finding a Spanish insurance company that will cover a foreign vehicle owned by a Spanish resident with a Spanish license.
The reason Yorick will have had to sell his luxury motorhome is that it's something he built himself. The Spanish are notoriously stubborn when it comes to modified vehicles so rather than register it as a camper he would have to register it as a commercial, difficult to do but not impossible. My VW Kombi is a right hand drive, N1 commercial and now on Spanish plates. It has sliding doors on both sides and windows in both sliding doors.
The Kombi is in wifey's name and was insured by a UK company to be kept permantly outside the UK at our Spanish address. I got my residency and exchanged my license several months before she did, a call to the insurance company and I was a named driver on the policy with a Spanish license. When she exchanged her license we put the van onto Spanish plates. The Spanish don't insure the person, they insure the vehicle, so any driver over the age of 25 can drive the Kombi or our car irrespective of what nationality license they have. Any fines are handed out to the owner though.
All very simple if you follow the rules.