BLOG: Spain Electric Scooter Rentals — Your Guide to Easy Mobility
For tourists visiting Madrid who want a smooth, stress-free, and genuinely enjoyable mobility rental experience, Scooter Town is the obvious choice. They've thought of everything, they speak your language, they come to you, and they treat every customer like a valued guest rather than a transaction.
Choosing the right mobility scooter rental provider is a key part of making that happen. Scooter Town combines genuine expertise, practical convenience, and tourist-focused service in a way that's hard to match. If you want a smooth, reliable, and stress-free experience from the moment you arrive in Madrid, they're well worth putting at the top of your list.
Finding somewhere to eat in Madrid is easy. Finding somewhere you can actually get into with a mobility scooter — and sit comfortably once you're there — takes a bit more planning.
Finding a genuinely accessible hotel in Madrid requires more than ticking a box on a booking site. "Accessible" can mean anything from a fully adapted room with roll-in shower to a ground-floor room with one grab rail. The difference matters enormously when you're travelling with a mobility scooter.
Your best option is an Eurotaxi (adapted taxi with ramp) booked in advance. The Metro technically works but is stressful with luggage and a scooter. Or skip the problem entirely: we can deliver a rental scooter to your hotel so you don't need to transport one from the airport at all.
You need two things covered: yourself (medical, trip cancellation, the usual) and the rental equipment (damage, theft, loss). Standard travel insurance handles the first. It usually doesn't handle the second.
Most rentals go perfectly smoothly — no calls, no issues, no drama. But knowing support exists changes how you feel about the trip. You're not wondering "what if something goes wrong?" You know the answer: you call, we fix it.
A typical mid-range scooter offers 25-35km on a full charge. A full day of Madrid sightseeing — museum in the morning, lunch, another attraction, dinner — usually covers 8-15km. You've got margin. But Madrid's hills, summer heat, and cobblestones all reduce range, so that margin matters.