This work focuses on the treatment in gas phase of air polluted with hydrogen sulphide in an electrochemical cell equipped with a MEA and demonstrates that it is a feasible option, in which this pollutant can be efficiently transformed into solid sulphur and sulfuric oxide. This later species can be successfully retained by reactive absorption into a sodium hydroxide solution producing a sodium sulphate solution, while the elemental sulphur obtained is dragged from the electrochemical reactor to a solid trap. This product has a pale-yellow colour and the XRD diffraction analysis shows that it has a S8 crystallization type. An increase in the current density applied produces an increase in the percentages of hydrogen sulphide removal (37.47, 50.67 and 65.33 % at 20, 50 and 100 mA cm−2) from the gas fed and influences on the speciation, favouring the formation of sulphur and the oxidation of water to oxygen over the formation of sulphur trioxide. The gas flowrate increment gives lower H2S elimination percentages (72.73, 50.67 and 51.69 % at 4, 7 and 10 mL min−1) and favours the dragging of sulphur which seems to be very positive to avoid its further oxidation to sulfuric oxide. Electrochemical characterization indicates that direct electro-oxidation of H2S gas takes place in the anode surface and that MEA does not undergo any relevant deterioration during performance of continuous operation tests. The maximum Coulombic efficiency for SO3 production was 60 % at 7 mL min−1 and 20 mA cm−2, while for the S0 production was 9.5 % at 10 mL min−1 at 50 mA cm−2. Energy consumption for H2S removal ranges from 18 to 87 Wh gS-1.