Schengen 90/180 Calculator

Count your Schengen days. Plan your next trip with confidence.

DAYS LEFT
90
0 of 90 days used

You can leave today — stay up to 90 days in a row.

Your trips

Past stays and future plans in one place — the analysis is automatic.

No trips yet. Add your first stay — the counters update instantly.

How the 90/180 rule works

Visitors from outside the EU can spend at most 90 days in the Schengen area within any 180-day period — visa-free or on a short-stay visa. The tricky part: the 180-day window is rolling and is recalculated for every single day of your stay. This calculator does exactly that maths for you.

How is the 180-day window counted?

The window rolls with you. For every day you spend in the Schengen area, count back 180 days and add up all days of presence in that period — the total must never exceed 90. There are no fixed calendar halves: each old day simply stops counting 180 days after it happened.

Do entry and exit days count?

Yes. Both the day you arrive and the day you leave count as full days of stay — even if your flight lands at 23:50 or departs at 00:20.

When can I come back after using all 90 days?

There is no single 'reset' date — days expire one by one, each of them 180 days after it was spent. After 90 consecutive days inside you generally need 90 full days outside before another long stay, but a shorter visit may be possible sooner. Add your trips above and the calculator shows your exact earliest entry date.

Who does the rule apply to?

Non-EU nationals on short stays: visa-free travellers and holders of a short-stay (type C) Schengen visa. It does not apply to EU citizens or to people holding a national long-stay visa or residence permit of a Schengen country — their days under that permit are counted differently.

Which countries are in the Schengen area?

29 countries: most EU member states plus Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland. Ireland and Cyprus are the two EU members currently outside Schengen (Cyprus is preparing to join), so days spent there do not count towards your 90.

What happens if I overstay?

Consequences range from fines and records in border systems to entry bans and trouble with future visa applications. The EU's Entry/Exit System now registers every border crossing electronically, so overstays no longer go unnoticed. If the calculator shows you are over the limit, leaving as soon as possible is the safest course.