
Mobile Vehicle Inspection Station in Campos: Relief for Overcrowded Test Centers
Mobile Vehicle Inspection Station in Campos: Relief for Overcrowded Test Centers
The Consell de Mallorca has signed a contract for a mobile vehicle inspection station in Campos. On a free 12,700 m² plot, up to 5,000 vehicle inspections per month should be possible from mid‑2026.
Mobile Vehicle Inspection Station in Campos: Relief for Overcrowded Test Centers
Plot provided, operation planned from mid-2026 — space for up to 5,000 vehicle checks per month
In the Plaça Major of Campos the mornings often smell of freshly baked ensaimada and motor oil in equal measure: craftsmen grab coffee, mechanics load spare parts into vans. Right here, in a municipal area, the town is providing a 12,700 square metre plot free of charge so that a mobile technical inspection station (TÜV/ITV) can be set up permanently. The island council has already signed the contract — the official start is scheduled for mid-2026.
The facts are clear: the site should be able to handle up to 5,000 vehicle checks per month. The explicit goal is to relieve the heavily used inspection stations on the island, especially the Manacor station, which has been experiencing long queues for months; events such as Vehicle inspection in Son Castelló closed for three months underline the urgency.
Anyone who drives along the MA-19 towards Campos in the morning knows the familiar sight: delivery vans, taxis and agricultural vehicles that need appointments but face fully booked schedules. An additional station on site brings practical advantages: fewer kilometres, less time lost for small businesses and private individuals, and thus slightly less traffic on country roads at weekends.
The decision to provide the municipal land free of charge shows how local authorities and the island council can cooperate on infrastructure matters. For Campos this means a small increase in service quality — for nearby workshops better planning reliability. Visitors who need to pick up or return a rental car will also benefit from shorter distances.
Practically speaking, this does not only mean more capacity: for the relief to be noticeable, clever organisation is also needed. Good ideas would include extended opening hours during peak times, an online appointment booking system with clear capacity display and occasional weekend shifts during the season. Mobile units could also rotate to other locations if unexpected bottlenecks appear elsewhere.
Another side effect should not go unmentioned: shorter trips to the inspection station also mean less fuel consumption and less noise for villages along the access roads. Small savings add up, especially in a season when many vehicles are on the move every day. Whether this alone replaces climate or traffic strategies is, of course, not the question — but it is a practical contribution to improving everyday life.
From the perspective of residents and local businesses the idea is pleasantly simple: shorter journeys, less waiting, back on the road faster. In the market square of Campos, where people meet in the afternoons and talk about the week, this news will likely be received with a relieved pat on the shoulder. If everything goes according to plan, mid-2026 will mark the start of a noticeably calmer inspection-station situation on the island — a small, concrete win in everyday life.
Outlook: For the project to be more than just a plot of land, it needs fine-tuning in implementation: transparent appointment allocation, coordinated working hours and a communication campaign so drivers know when and how they can use the new station. Then the mobile option can become a reliable component of Mallorca's everyday traffic management.
Read, researched, and newly interpreted for you: Source
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