Valencia is one of the most common destinations for citizens of Madrid, both for vacations, leisure and work. If you are going to travel by road, you should know how many, what type and where you will find the DGT radars.
The route from Madrid to Valencia, and vice versa, is one of the busiest and with the greatest presence of road traffic in the entire country. And the fact is that, not in vain, both are two of the largest cities, with the greatest leisure offer and also the most relevant at a commercial level in Spain.
It is also not an excessively long trip, and the 360 kilometers that separate the capital with the city located at the foot of the Mediterranean Sea can be done in just over 3 hours and a half at legal speed.
This last point is important for security reasons and for the good of your pocket, since there are numerous radars that the General Directorate of Traffic has located on the main connecting road between the two cities, the highway A-3.
Do you want to know all the ones you will find on your way through the provinces of Madrid, Cuenca, Albacete and Valencia? Here you have them all:
Radars from Madrid to Valencia (increasing direction)
As you can see in the table, the journey from Madrid to Valencia has eight DGT radars, one located in Madrid, three in Cuenca and four more in Valencia. Of these, five are fixed radars, two are mobile or belt-driven and one, located at the descent of the Buñol Aqueduct, is a section with an average speed of 100 km/h.
Radars from Valencia to Madrid (decreasing direction)
Regarding the opposite route, from Valencia to Madrid, today there are 10 installed radars, three in the province of Valencia, four in Cuenca and three in Madrid. From them, six are fixed and four are mobile or belt.
And remember! The DGT constantly incorporates new radars to the roads, so you must bear in mind that this list may increase in the near future.
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DGT | radarbot