Schengen Calculator

Schengen Calculator | 90/180 Days Rule & Visa-Free Stay Calculator
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Schengen Calculator

Calculate your 90-day deadline, days used, and days remaining in the Schengen Area. Perfect for visa-free travelers navigating the 90/180 days rule.

🛂 90/180 Rule
📅 Deadline Calculator
🗓️ Days Used
🌍 Visa-Free Travel

Schengen 90/180 Calculator

Calculate deadlines and days remaining

Calculation Type

Choose the calculation you need based on your travel plans


Travel Dates

The date you entered or plan to enter the Schengen Area

Quick examples:

Your Schengen Status

90/180 days rule calculation results

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Enter your travel dates and click Calculate to find your 90-day deadline or days remaining.

Schengen 90/180 Rule

Quick guide to the Schengen visa-free travel rules for non-EU nationals.

Concept Rule / Limit Description
Maximum Stay90 DaysMaximum days allowed within any 180-day period for visa-exempt travelers.
Rolling Window180 DaysThe 180-day period is a rolling window, not a fixed calendar year.
Day CountingEntry + ExitBoth the day of entry and the day of exit count as full days towards the limit.
Overstay PenaltyVariesFines, deportation, or entry bans (usually 1-3 years) depending on the country.
Visa-ExemptETIAS (2025)US, UK, Canada, etc. will need ETIAS authorization starting mid-2025.

Schengen Rules FAQ

Everything you need to know about the 90/180 days rule and visa-free travel in Europe.

The Schengen 90/180 rule states that non-EU nationals who do not need a visa (visa-exempt travelers) can stay in the Schengen Area for a maximum of 90 days within any 180-day period. The 180-day period is a ‘rolling window’, meaning you must always look back 180 days from any given day to ensure you have not exceeded 90 days of stay.

If you are making a single continuous trip, your 90-day deadline is exactly 90 days after your date of entry. For example, if you enter the Schengen Area on 1st January, your 90th day is 31st March, and you must leave by the end of 31st March. This calculator automatically adds 90 days to your entry date to find your exact deadline.

No, the 180-day period does not reset on a fixed date like January 1st. It is a continuously rolling window. On any day you are in the Schengen Area, you must look back at the previous 180 days and count how many days you have spent in the Schengen Area. If that total is 90 days, you must leave. The ‘window’ moves forward one day at a time.

Yes. According to the Schengen Borders Code, both the day you enter and the day you exit the Schengen Area count as full days towards your 90-day limit. For example, if you enter at 11:00 PM on Friday and leave at 1:00 AM on Saturday, that counts as 2 days, not 1. Always plan your travel with this in mind to avoid accidental overstays.

Overstaying the 90-day limit is a serious violation of Schengen immigration rules. Penalties vary by country but can include heavy fines, immediate deportation, and an entry ban (usually ranging from 1 to 3 years) that prevents you from entering the Schengen Area or the EU in the future. It can also negatively impact future visa applications.

Citizens of the UK, US, Canada, Australia, and many other countries do not need a traditional visa for short stays (up to 90 days) for tourism or business. However, starting in mid-2025, these travelers will need to apply for an ETIAS (European Travel Information and Authorisation System) waiver before traveling. ETIAS is an electronic authorization linked to your passport, similar to the US ESTA or UK ETA.

Imagine a window that is 180 days long. Every day you move this window forward by one day. To check if you can stay on a specific day, you look at the 180 days immediately preceding that day. You count all the days you were present in the Schengen Area during that window. If the total is less than 90, you can stay. If it is 90 or more, you must be outside the Schengen Area.

No, simply leaving the Schengen Area does not ‘reset’ your 90-day clock. Because the 180-day window is rolling, the days you spent in Schengen will only ‘drop off’ your count once 180 days have passed since those specific days. To fully reset your 90-day allowance, you must stay outside the Schengen Area for a continuous 90 days.

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