The municipal taxes affecting this activity are property tax (IBI), the tax on construction, installations and works (ICIO) and the tax on economic activities (IAE).
Alongside the report, a web tool has been developed to search for tax aid for charging points in all municipalities with more than 10,000 inhabitants.
Madrid, 4 November 2025.- Only 18% of Spanish municipalities offer tax rebates for citizens and companies that decide to install charging points for electric vehicles. This is the conclusion of the latest report published by Fundación Renovables and the Business Association for the Development and Promotion of Electric Mobility (AEDIVE), which analyses local tax ordinances for property tax (IBI), the tax on construction, installations and works (ICIO) and the tax on economic activities (IAE).
In addition, alongside the report, Fundación Renovables and AEDIVE have developed a web tool that allows users to search for tax aid for charging points in each Spanish municipality with more than 10,000 inhabitants, which together account for 80% of the country’s population and more than 90% of its companies.
The data show that only 7% of Spanish municipalities offer tax rebates on property tax (IBI) for those installing electric-vehicle charging points in their homes. According to the results, six autonomous communities have no municipality with tax ordinances offering IBI incentives. By contrast, Catalonia has the largest number of municipalities promoting the installation of charging points through IBI, with 21 towns and cities.
Regarding ICIO, 25% of municipalities have ordinances offering rebates to people who install charging points. Once again, Catalonia is the autonomous community with the most municipalities committed to promoting electromobility through their tax ordinances. Only Navarre and La Rioja have no municipalities with ICIO rebates.
As for IAE, only 4% of local councils offer rebates for charging installations. Catalonia again leads, although only nine municipalities were found to have ordinances with rebates on the tax on economic activities.
“The emergence of the first municipalities applying tax rebates to promote the installation of charging points shows pioneering commitment at local level and marks the way for more municipalities to join the transformation of mobility in their territories”, explains Raquel Paule, Director General of Fundación Renovables.
“Local councils have a crucial role in facilitating the work of private companies—charging operators—in areas linked to administrative bureaucracy and the implementation of fiscal measures and rebates that support deployment and optimise private capital investments. The dynamic information we have developed together with Fundación Renovables in this area therefore seems more necessary and useful than ever”, says Arturo Pérez de Lucía, Director General of AEDIVE.