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Greece

Driving in Greece as a Japan National

Greece offers scenic coastal and mountain driving with ferry access to islands. Athens traffic is intense; island roads are narrow. An IDP is recommended for non-EU visitors. Parking can be challenging.

Key Things to Know First

No IDP Typically Required

Greece generally accepts foreign licences for short-term visitors. Carry your original licence and passport at all times.

Drive on the Right — You Are Switching Sides

Japan drives on the left, but Greece drives on the right. Extra caution required at roundabouts, intersections, and after exits.

Tips for switching sides

Side-by-Side Comparison

Rule Japan Greece Change?
Traffic side Left-hand traffic Right-hand traffic Yes
Speed unit km/h km/h Same
IDP required No No
Min. driving age 18 18 Same
Emergency number 110 112 Different
Road difficulty Moderate Moderate

Speed Limits in Greece

Urban
50 km/h
Rural / Open road
90 km/h
Highway / Motorway
130 km/h

Documents to Carry in Greece

  • Original driving licence from Japan — must be valid and unexpired
  • Passport or national ID — carry at all times while driving
  • Car insurance certificate — verify it covers Greece before departure
  • Vehicle registration / rental agreement

Emergency Number in Greece

112

112 is the pan-European emergency number, widely accepted across many countries worldwide.

Emergency numbers for all countries

Full Greece Driving Guide

Road rules, toll system, fuel types, parking, regional quirks — everything you need for driving in Greece.

Read the complete guide