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Schengen 90/180 Day Calculator

Planning time in Spain or elsewhere in Europe on a visa-free passport? This calculator helps you check the Schengen 90/180-day rule: as a short-stay visitor you may spend at most 90 days in any rolling 180-day period across the whole Schengen area. Enter your past and upcoming trips and the tool works out how many days you have left and whether a planned trip would put you over. It’s built for non-EU visitors — including travellers from the UK, the US, Canada, Australia and New Zealand — who visit without a residence permit or long-stay visa.

How the 90/180-day rule works

The rule is simpler than it looks once you understand two ideas.

One shared pool, not 90 days per country. The Schengen area works as a single zone. Days spent in Spain, France, Italy or any other member country all count toward the same 90-day total — you don’t get a fresh 90 days each time you cross an internal border.

A rolling 180-day window, not a fixed calendar. This is the part most people get wrong. The 180 days don’t reset on 1 January or at the start of each trip. Instead, for any given day you’re in Schengen, you look back over the previous 180 days (that day included) and add up how many days you were present. That total must stay at or below 90. As older days drop out of the back of the window, your allowance gradually frees up again — there’s no single “reset date”.

Entry and exit days both count. The day you arrive and the day you leave each count as a full day of presence.

Example. If you spend 90 days in a row, you must then leave the Schengen area, and you can only return once enough of those earlier days have slid out of the rolling 180-day window. Short trips work the same way: each one adds to the running total until earlier days age out.

Which countries are in the Schengen area

According to the European Commission, the Schengen area is made up of 29 countries: 25 EU member states plus four non-EU countries — Iceland, Norway, Switzerland and Liechtenstein.

Two points worth noting:


🔹Ireland and Cyprus are in the EU but are not part of Schengen, so time there is counted separately.

🔹Non-Schengen countries (for example the UK, or countries in the Western Balkans) do not count toward your 90 days — a common way for travellers to “wait out” the window.

Who the rule applies to — and who's exempt

The 90/180-day rule applies to short-stay visitors: people entering visa-free for a short trip, and holders of a short-stay Schengen (type C) visa.

🔹You are not subject to the 90/180 rule if you hold: an EU/Spanish residence permit,


🔹or a long-stay (type D) visa.

These documents are designed for stays longer than 90 days and follow their own national rules. In short: if your goal is to live in Spain rather than visit, the answer isn’t counting days — it’s the right residence route. (UK nationals: since Brexit you are treated as a non-EU visitor and are now subject to this rule.)

What's changing at the border: EES and ETIAS

Two EU systems are changing how stays are recorded — but neither changes the 90/180 maths itself.

🔹EES (Entry/Exit System): an electronic border system that records entries and exits digitally, replacing manual passport stamps. It became fully operational across Schengen on 10 April 2026, which means your days are now logged automatically — so accurate self-tracking matters more than ever.

🔹ETIAS: a pre-travel authorisation (not a visa) for visa-exempt visitors, expected in late 2026. It adds a step before you travel but does not extend the 90-day limit.

Timing for these systems has shifted before; always check the latest official information.

Disclaimer

This calculator and page are for general information only and do not constitute legal advice. The 90/180-day rule has exceptions (residence permits, long-stay visas, certain family-member and bilateral rules), and only the relevant authorities can give a definitive answer for your situation. For borderline cases, verify with the European Commission’s official short-stay calculator, and if you’re planning to stay in Spain long-term, speak with an immigration lawyer about the right residence route.

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