Schengen Visa Calculator

Check your 90/180 day Schengen visa compliance instantly. Enter your travel dates below and see exactly how many days you can stay in the Schengen Area.

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CURRENT STATUS

90 Days Remaining

You have used 0 of your 90 days allowance.

90

STATUS

You are safe

Plenty of days remaining.

Your Trips

0 records

Start Planning Your Schengen Travel

Add your past and upcoming trips below to automatically calculate your remaining days and ensure you stay within the 90/180 rule.

How to Use This Schengen Calculator

1

Select Your Travel Dates

Click 'Select dates' and pick your entry and exit dates from the calendar.

2

Add Your Trip

Click 'Add Trip' to record your Schengen stay. Add multiple trips to track your full travel history.

3

View Your Results

See your remaining days instantly. The calculator shows days used, days remaining, and warns if you're approaching the limit.

4

Plan Your Return

Use 'Plan your safest return' to see optimal re-entry dates that maximize your available days.

Schengen 90/180 Rule Quick Facts

  • You can stay up to 90 days within any 180-day rolling period
  • Entry and exit days both count as full days
  • The rule applies to the entire Schengen Area, not individual countries
  • Overstaying can result in fines, deportation, and future visa bans

90/180 Rule Summary

The Schengen short-stay rule allows up to 90 days of presence in any rolling 180-day window across the entire Schengen Area.

90 days total, not per country

All Schengen countries share the same 90-day allowance. Time in one country reduces days available everywhere else.

Rolling 180-day window

Look back 180 days from any date of stay. The total number of days in that window must be 90 or fewer.

Entry and exit days count

Both your arrival date and departure date are counted as full Schengen days.

Plan ahead to avoid overstays

Add past and future trips to see remaining days and the earliest safe re-entry date.

This calculator is for planning purposes. Always confirm your eligibility with official guidance for your nationality and visa type.

Why this calculator matters now

EES raises the cost of sloppy Schengen day tracking

With the Entry/Exit System scheduled to be fully operational on April 10, 2026, short-stay travellers should treat every trip date as a compliance record, not a rough estimate.

Keep your own trip history, compare against the official short-stay calculator when needed, and leave buffer days when your itinerary is tight.

At the border

Biometric checks become routine

First registration may take longer, especially for travellers who have not yet enrolled in the system.

For your allowance

Overstays are easier to detect

The 90/180 rule does not change, but enforcement becomes more systematic once entries and exits are stored centrally.

Best practice

Cross-check with official guidance

If your passport, visa type, or itinerary is unusual, verify it with official EU or consular guidance before you travel.

Verify With Official Guidance

Rules can vary by nationality, visa category, and bilateral agreements. Use official sources to confirm your situation before you travel.

Check official government or consulate guidance

Confirm entry conditions, required documents, and local visa rules for your passport.

Use an official short-stay calculator as a second check

Compare your results to an official calculator when planning long or complex itineraries.

Learn more
FAQ

Schengen Calculator FAQs

Quick answers to the most common questions about the 90/180 rule.

1

Does the 90/180 rule reset after I leave?

No. It is a rolling window. Each day you are in the Schengen Area counts against the 90 days in the last 180 days.

2

Do arrival and departure days count?

Yes. Both entry and exit days are counted as full days in Schengen.

3

Is the limit per country or for the whole area?

The 90-day limit applies to the entire Schengen Area, not individual countries.

4

Can I use this calculator for future trips?

Yes. Add upcoming trips to see your remaining days and safe return dates before you book.

5

What happens if I overstay?

Overstays can lead to fines, entry bans, or visa issues. If you are close to the limit, confirm with official guidance.

Plan Your Next Step

Keep your Schengen travel compliant with these resources.

Understanding the Schengen 90/180 Rule

The Schengen 90/180 rule explained step-by-step: how the rolling window works, common mistakes to avoid, and how to calculate your remaining days. Updated for 2026.

Schengen 90-Day Rule Calculator

Use our free Schengen 90-day rule calculator to track your remaining days in Europe. Understand the rolling 180-day window and avoid overstaying your visa.

How to Check Your Remaining Schengen Days

Learn exactly how to check your remaining Schengen days. Step-by-step guide to calculating days left in the 90/180 rolling window with examples.

Schengen Visa Overstay: Consequences & What You Can Do

What happens if you overstay your Schengen visa? Learn about fines, entry bans, deportation risks, and how to avoid or resolve an overstay situation.

Planning Multiple Trips to the Schengen Area

Planning multiple trips to the Schengen Area? Learn how to manage the 90/180 rule across back-to-back visits, maximize your days, and avoid overstaying.

Schengen Visa Extension: Can You Extend Your Stay?

Everything about Schengen visa extensions: who qualifies, how to apply, which countries allow it, and what to do if your extension is denied. Updated for 2026.

EES

Understand how the EU Entry/Exit System changes Schengen border checks, 90/180-day tracking, biometrics, and what travellers should prepare for in 2026.

First EES registration

What first-time EES registration looks like after April 10, 2026: personal data, facial image, fingerprints, the Travel to Europe app, and how to prepare for a smoother first crossing.

ETIAS

Understand what ETIAS is, who is likely to need it, how it differs from EES, and why it does not replace the Schengen 90/180-day rule.

How to apply

ETIAS is not active yet, but this guide explains the official application flow, what you will need, the EUR 20 fee, processing times, validity, and why you should apply well before travel once it launches.

ETIAS vs EES

Compare ETIAS and EES side by side: timing, purpose, traveller actions, border checks, and what each system means for Schengen short-stay travel.