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Belgium also gives electric vehicles a few perks — especially for parking and in low‑emission zones. To make it all work, there are specific road signs, rules and registration requirements. Visitors from abroad: if you’re driving your EV to Brussels, Ghent or Antwerp, do your homework first — or risk an unwelcome bill.

Special road signs for EVs

Belgium has introduced its own road signs for parking and charging electric cars in recent years — with clear rules on who may use them and on what terms.

The most relevant combinations are:

Parking sign with plug symbol (EV with cable pictogram):

This sign marks a reserved charging bay for electric vehicles. Important: Since October 2022 you may only park there while actively charging. Not plugged in — even in an EV — means a €58 fine.

Additional markings on the road surface:

Charging bays are often highlighted with symbols on the tarmac (e.g., plug, battery, green paint). These also make it clear: EVs may charge here — not just park.

Information sign ‘Charging station’:

Some cities use extra signs to flag nearby charge points. These are informative only and don’t grant parking rights. Tip: The sign right by the bay is the one that counts.

Common misunderstandings

No parking without charging:

Even for EVs: if you’re not charging, you can’t occupy a charging bay. This rule is uniform across Belgium and increasingly enforced.

No special EV number plates in Belgium:

Unlike Germany, Belgium has no EV‑specific number plates. Signage and camera checks control who may enter low‑emission zones or use charging bays. Foreign vehicles don’t need a visible sticker — but often an online registration.

Rules vary by city:

In Brussels, parking at public charge points is usually free while you’re charging, whereas cities like Leuven or Antwerp still charge normal parking fees there. Tip: When in doubt, check the supplementary panel — or the city’s website.

Free parking and special privileges

Belgium has no nationwide policy on free parking for EVs — each municipality decides. The result is a patchwork of local rules:

Brussels:

Parking at public charge points is free for EVs while charging.

Ghent:

Charging bays are usually free — in some cases with no time limit. The city even debated whether EVs were “too privileged”.

Antwerp & Leuven:

No exceptions here — EVs pay regular parking fees, even at charge points.

As a rule of thumb: if you leave your EV in a charging bay, stay plugged in and follow local instructions — especially time limits and tariffs.

Low‑emission zones and registration

Belgium has several low‑emission zones (LEZ), including:

Access is tightly controlled — older diesels and petrol cars are often barred. EVs are always allowed, whatever the country of registration.

But: pre‑registration is mandatory!

Foreign vehicles (except those registered in the Netherlands) must register their number plate online before entering.

Flanders (Antwerp, Ghent, Mechelen): One registration covers all Flemish zones.

Brussels: Separate registration required — even for EVs.

Validity: usually 5 years — free of charge.

Heads‑up: Entering an LEZ without registering can cost you €150–€350, even in a zero‑emission EV.

Tolls and access rules

Belgium has no motorway tolls for cars — so EVs pay exactly as much as everyone else: nothing.

The only exception:

Liefkenshoek Tunnel near Antwerp:

There’s a toll (€4–€7), including for EVs — no special treatment.

There’s no bus‑lane access, “green lanes” or congestion‑charge exemptions for EVs either. Legally, you drive like any other car — just quieter and cleaner.

Practical tips for visitors

Before entering an LEZ:

Register your vehicle — ideally 1–2 days in advance via the city’s official site (e.g., lez.brussels or lez.antwerpen.be). No stickers needed.

Charging on the go:

The charging network in Flanders is very well developed; in Wallonia it can be patchy. Tip: top up in Flanders before heading south.

Charging cards & apps:

Common German charging cards (EnBW, Maingau, Plugsurfing) usually work fine. Handy apps: Chargemap, ABRP, Shell Recharge.

Hotels & holiday rentals:

Ask about charging — or use a public charger overnight. Only use Schuko sockets with prior permission and, if needed, a suitable adaptor.

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