Madrid's stations ring the city along the M-30 and M-40, with the big brands — Repsol, Cepsa and BP — on the main routes and cheaper unmanned Ballenoil and Plenoil sites toward the outskirts. The city's low-emission zone affects where older cars can go, so plan central stops with that in mind.
Local tips
- The M-30 and M-40 ring roads have the most stations for a quick fill-up.
- Low-cost unmanned stations on the outskirts often beat brand prices.
- Check Madrid's low-emission zone rules if you drive an older vehicle.
Refuelia loads real stations in Madrid from OpenStreetMap and layers driver reports on top. Prices appear when reported by drivers or verified sources, always with a timestamp so you know how fresh they are. See Madrid on the map →
Plan your stop
Use the filters to narrow to petrol, diesel, LPG, CNG or EV charging, switch on “open now” and “fuel available”, and sort by nearest, cheapest or most recently updated. When you arrive, a quick confirmation keeps the map accurate for the next driver in Madrid.