Schengen 90/180 day calculator
Non-EU visitors can spend at most 90 days in any rolling 180-day window in the Schengen area. Add your trips below to see how many days you've used, how many remain, and the earliest date you can safely re-enter. Free, no account needed.
Your Schengen trips
Add each entry and exit date. Both the day you arrive and the day you leave count as days of presence.
Set this to a future date to plan a trip — see how many days you'll have on the day you arrive.
Add at least one trip to see how many of your 90 days you've used.
Don't want to re-check by hand every trip?
Track it automatically — freeYuravia watches your 90/180 count plus 75 tax-residency rules. No ads, anonymous.
How the 90/180 rule actually works
The rule sounds simple — 90 days in 180 — but the trap is the word rolling. The 180-day window is not a fixed calendar block. It moves with you: on any given day you look back over the previous 180 days (that day plus the prior 179) and add up every day you were physically present in the Schengen area. That total must stay at or under 90. Both your arrival day and your departure day count.
Because the window slides forward each day, a stay that is perfectly legal today can put you over the limit a few days later as older days drop off and newer ones are counted. That is exactly why a spreadsheet or mental math fails — and why, since the EU Entry/Exit System (EES) went fully live in April 2026, the count is now recorded biometrically at the border and overstays are flagged automatically.
Frequently asked questions
What is the Schengen 90/180 day rule?
Non-EU/EEA short-stay visitors may spend at most 90 days inside the Schengen area within any rolling 180-day period. For any given day, you count back 180 days (that day plus the previous 179) and add up the days you were present — the total must not exceed 90.
Do my entry and exit days both count?
Yes. Under the official rule, the day you enter the Schengen area and the day you leave both count as days of presence, even if you were only there for part of the day.
Is the 180-day window a fixed calendar period?
No — it is a rolling window. It moves with every day. A day that pushed you over the limit last month may have aged out of the window today, and a stay that is fine today can become non-compliant on a future date as the window shifts.
What happens if I overstay after the EES launch?
The EU Entry/Exit System (EES), fully operational since April 2026, biometrically records every entry and exit and counts your 90/180 days automatically. Overstays are flagged automatically and can lead to fines, entry bans, and a permanent record. Miscalculating by even one day can trigger an alert.
Does a digital-nomad or long-stay visa change the count?
Yes. National long-stay visas and residence permits (for example Portugal, Spain, or Greece digital-nomad visas) generally exempt you from the 90/180 short-stay limit. This calculator covers the standard short-stay case only and is not legal advice.
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