Driving a license-free car in Le Mans
Driving a license-free car in Le Mans (Sarthe): the rules, the 45 km/h limit, allowed roads, the AM licence and routes suited to light quadricycles.
In Le Mans (Sarthe), a license-free car drives freely on all local, secondary and main roads, up to 45 km/h; only motorways and expressways stay off-limits. The AM licence (the French moped licence) is required for people born after 1 January 1988.
License-free car rules in Le Mans
In Le Mans, license-free cars (light quadricycles) drive on secondary, local and main roads with a top speed of 45 km/h. Motorways, expressways and some ring roads are off-limits.
The AM licence (the French moped licence) is required for people born after 1 January 1988. For people born before that date, no licence is required.
License-free cars in Le Mans: what to know
Le Mans has 145,421 residents and is a major urban hub. The heavy traffic and complex road network make a license-free car especially handy: smaller footprint, easier parking, low running costs. Watch out for the ring roads and expressways that wrap the city, though: they are strictly off-limits to light quadricycles and must be skirted via secondary roads.
In the Pays de la Loire region, Le Mans sits on a dense web of secondary roads well suited to a license-free car. For everyday trips between nearby towns, these local and main roads, away from the expressways, give a calm and comfortable setting for a 45 km/h vehicle. The motorways that cross the region stay strictly off-limits to light quadricycles.
Pollution and the future of license-free cars in Le Mans
Le Mans is not currently subject to a Low Emission Zone (LEZ). Both combustion and electric license-free cars can drive there with no Crit'Air restriction, across the whole town and its neighbours. That could change if the town crosses certain pollution thresholds or joins a metropolis already engaged in an LEZ scheme, so it is worth following local announcements if you plan to keep a vehicle for several years.
Practical tip
For getting around Le Mans, favour local roads and secondary main roads. The main arteries into town are usually fine, but always avoid bypasses and ring roads: their limit often tops 70 km/h, which puts them off-limits to light quadricycles. A dedicated GPS like TacTac filters these roads out automatically to give you a fully legal route.
License-free car routes from Le Mans
Frequently asked questions, license-free cars in Le Mans
Can you drive a license-free car in Le Mans?
Yes, license-free cars (light quadricycles) drive freely in Le Mans on all local, secondary and main roads, up to 45 km/h. Motorways, expressways and some ring roads stay off-limits.
Is there a Low Emission Zone (LEZ) in Le Mans?
No, Le Mans has no LEZ yet. All license-free cars, electric or combustion, can drive freely across the whole town.
What licence do you need to drive a license-free car in Le Mans?
The AM licence (the French moped licence) is required for people born after 1 January 1988. People born before that date can drive a license-free car with no specific licence, in Le Mans as anywhere in France.
How fast can a license-free car go in Le Mans?
The legal top speed of a license-free car is 45 km/h, in Le Mans as everywhere in France. This limit applies on every road, including those where the speed is normally higher.
Which roads are off-limits to license-free cars around Le Mans?
All motorways, expressways and roads limited above 70 km/h are off-limits to license-free cars. Around Le Mans in Sarthe, this mainly covers the motorways and express roads. TacTac filters these out automatically so you only get allowed routes.
The GPS built for your license-free car in Le Mans
TacTac filters out banned roads, works out realistic ETAs and guides you with tailored voice instructions.
Free early access →