Calculadora Schengen 90/180

La Calculadora Schengen 90/180 calcula cuántos días has usado en la ventana móvil de 180 días — la regla que limita a los visitantes no-UE a 90 días dentro de cualquier período de 180 días en todo el área Schengen. Agrega tus viajes pasados y planeados (fechas de entrada y salida inclusive), elige una fecha 'a partir de', y la calculadora muestra días usados, días restantes y qué viajes contribuyen a la ventana actual.

The Schengen 90/180 rule: non-EU visitors can spend up to 90 days within any rolling 180-day period across the Schengen area. Add your trips below — entry and exit dates inclusive — and the calculator counts days in the rolling window.

Your trips

The day for which you're checking your usage. Use today's date for current status, or a future date you're planning to enter.

Days used in past 180 days (window: 2025-11-062026-05-04)
0 / 90 days
Days remaining in current window: 90
Educational tool only — not legal advice. Both entry and exit days count as days of presence. The 90/180 rule applies to the entire Schengen area as a whole — you can't reset by leaving Germany for France. Long-stay visas, residency permits, and visa-free agreements with non-Schengen countries (UK, Ireland) follow different rules. For an authoritative determination, use the official EU calculator at ec.europa.eu.

Cómo usar

  1. 1

    Agrega cada viaje Schengen con fechas de entrada y salida (ambas cuentan).

  2. 2

    Haz clic en '+ Agregar viaje' para más viajes. Elimina con el botón Remove.

  3. 3

    Establece la fecha 'a partir de' — generalmente hoy, o una fecha futura de entrada planeada.

  4. 4

    Lee días usados de 90 en los últimos 180 días desde la fecha a-partir-de.

  5. 5

    Revisa la tabla de viajes para ver cuáles visitas pasadas contribuyen a tu ventana actual.

Preguntas frecuentes

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What This Calculator Does

The Microapp Schengen 90/180 Calculator tracks your days in the Schengen area against the rolling 180-day window — the rule that limits non-EU visitors to 90 days within any consecutive 180-day period. The 'rolling' aspect is what catches most travelers: it's not 90 days per calendar half-year; it's 90 days within the 180 days immediately preceding any given moment.

Worked example. You're a US citizen planning travel:
• Trip 1: Paris, March 1-15 (15 days)
• Trip 2: Rome, May 1-31 (31 days)
• Planning Trip 3: Amsterdam, August 1

As of August 1, looking back 180 days takes you to February 3.
• Trip 1 (March 1-15): all 15 days in window
• Trip 2 (May 1-31): all 31 days in window
• Total used: 46 days
• Days remaining: 44 days for August trip (you'd hit the limit ~September 13)
Note: Trip 1 starts rolling out of the window starting August 28 (180 days after March 1). The window keeps shifting.

The 90/180 Rule, Precisely

The official wording from EU regulations: a non-EU visitor "may stay in the Schengen area for up to 90 days in any 180-day period." The key word is "any." For any given day, you count back exactly 180 days and sum up your presence in that window. If the sum is over 90, you've overstayed.

Both endpoints count. If you enter on March 1 and leave on March 5, that's 5 days (March 1, 2, 3, 4, 5) — not 4. The stamp date matters, not the time of day. A 24-hour visit can use 2 days if it crosses midnight.

The window is rolling, not fixed. The window for "today" might include a 60-day stay. The window for "30 days from today" might include only 30 days of that stay because some of it has rolled out the back.

Which Countries Count

27 countries as of 2024 in the Schengen area:

RegionCountries
EU + SchengenAustria, Belgium, Bulgaria*, Croatia, Czechia, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania*, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden
Non-EU + SchengenIceland, Norway, Switzerland, Liechtenstein
EU but NOT SchengenIreland, Cyprus
Non-EU and NOT SchengenUK, Albania, Kosovo, Bosnia, Montenegro, Serbia, Turkey, Russia, Belarus, Ukraine, Moldova

*Bulgaria and Romania joined Schengen for air/sea travel in March 2024; full land border integration is still in progress.

Practical implications: A trip from France (Schengen) to Ireland (EU non-Schengen) DOES count as leaving Schengen — your days reset until you re-enter. Trips between Schengen countries do NOT reset anything.

What Counts as a Day

Both entry and exit days are full days. Some examples:

  • Land in Paris 11:30pm March 1, leave March 1 at midnight (impossible but illustrative): 1 day
  • Land in Paris March 1, leave March 2: 2 days
  • Land in Paris March 1, leave March 8: 8 days
  • Transit through Frankfurt 6am-10am, then onto Croatia (non-Schengen until 2023): 1 day
  • Cruise stops in Italy 8am-6pm, sleeps on the ship in international waters: 1 day (port visit counts)

The visa stamp determines the days. A delayed flight that lands at 1am the next day counts the next day's date, not yesterday's flight time.

Common Misconceptions

"I leave Schengen for 24 hours, my counter resets." No. The counter is rolling — leaving for 24 hours just means those 24 hours don't count against your total. You still have to wait for old days to roll out of the 180-day window naturally.

"I can spend 90 days in France, then 90 days in Spain." No. The 90/180 limit applies to the entire Schengen area as one unit, not per country.

"Tourist visa exemption gives me 90 days no matter what." No. The 90 days are within ANY rolling 180-day period. If you used 80 days in the past 6 months, you only get 10 more days right now.

"They don't really check." Border officers DO check, especially at land borders, especially when you've previously been near the limit, and especially with electronic stamping systems that all 27 Schengen countries now share.

Consequences of Overstaying

Overstay lengthTypical consequence
1-3 days, accidentalVerbal warning at exit, sometimes a small fine
1-2 weeksFine €100-€500, possible 1-year entry ban
1+ monthsHigher fines, deportation, 3-5 year entry ban likely
Multiple overstays / repeat offenders5+ year ban, possibly permanent for severe cases

Consequences also vary by country — Germany and France are stricter; Italy and Greece sometimes more lenient. Don't bet on leniency; the calculator exists so you don't have to.

How to Stay Longer Legally

National long-stay visa (D-visa): Issued by a specific country (e.g., a French long-stay visa for digital nomads). Allows stays of 91-365 days but generally only in the issuing country.

Digital nomad visas: Several countries (Portugal, Spain, Estonia, Czechia, Greece) now offer specific visas for remote workers, typically 1-2 years renewable.

Residence permit: For those moving to a Schengen country for work, study, family reunion, or significant investment. Process varies by country, typically 3-12 months.

Citizenship: Through ancestry (especially Italian, Irish, Polish, German), naturalization (typically 5-10 years residency), or marriage. The longest path but the most complete.

Tips for Maximizing Your 90 Days

  • Track exits as well as entries. Both count.
  • Don't overstay even by a day "to be safe." Border systems are increasingly automated; what looks like leniency at one airport may be a recorded violation at the next.
  • Schedule longer trips with breaks. 60 days in, 90 days out, 30 days back is sustainable.
  • Save your boarding passes and visa stamps. Border officers have access to the SIS (Schengen Information System) but errors happen — having your own records helps if challenged.
  • Re-enter cautiously after long stays. If you used 80 days in the past 6 months, that next entry needs to leave room within the rolling window.

Educational Tool — Not Legal Advice

This calculator implements the standard 90/180 rolling window math used by border officers. For an authoritative determination of your specific situation, use the official EU calculator at ec.europa.eu. For complex cases involving multiple visa types, residency applications, or potential overstays, consult an immigration lawyer in the country you'll be visiting.

Related Tools

For general date math (days between two dates, day of week, etc.), see the Days Between Calculator and the Date Time Calculator. For deadline tracking ("how many days until my visa expires"), the Countdown Timer handles it.