Schengen 90/180 Day Calculator — Days Remaining

Visa & ImmigrationUpdated July 2026

The Schengen 90/180 rule trips up thousands of travellers: you may spend only 90 days in any rolling 180-day window across the whole Schengen area. It's not per-country and not per-calendar-year. Enter your past and planned trips and this tool shows exactly how many days you've used and how many remain — so you never risk an overstay ban.

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Days remaining today

The 180-day window is rolling — it moves with every day. This tool checks the window ending on your chosen date.

An unofficial planning aid. The official EU Schengen calculator and border authorities are the final word — verify before you travel.

How to use this tool

  1. Set the date you want to check (today, or a future planned entry date).
  2. Add each Schengen trip's entry and exit dates — include days you're planning ahead.
  3. Both the entry and exit day count as days spent, per the official rule.
  4. Press Calculate to see days used and days remaining in the rolling window.
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Frequently asked questions

How does the Schengen 90/180 rule work?

You may be in the Schengen area for a maximum of 90 days within any rolling 180-day period. "Rolling" means that on any given day you look back 180 days and count your presence — it is not a fixed calendar period. Both entry and exit days count as days of presence.

Is the 90 days per country or for all of Schengen?

For the whole Schengen area combined, not per country. Hopping from France to Germany to Italy uses the same shared 90-day allowance. The area covers most of the EU plus Norway, Switzerland, Iceland and others — but not Ireland, and rules for newer members can differ.

What happens if I overstay?

Overstaying can lead to fines, deportation and an entry ban of months or years, plus trouble with future visa applications. Border systems (the new EES) increasingly track this automatically, so the days must genuinely add up. When in doubt, leave early.

Does a residence permit or long-stay visa count?

No — time spent in a Schengen country on a national long-stay (D) visa or residence permit does not consume your 90 short-stay days. This calculator is for short-stay (Type C / visa-free) visits only.

When do my days 'come back'?

As the 180-day window rolls forward, older days of presence drop out of the count and free up. That's why the same trips give a different remaining balance depending on the date you check — set a future date to plan your next entry precisely.

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