Add your trips to Europe and see how many days you've used, how many are left, and when you can safely go back
Your Schengen trips
Enter each visit to the Schengen area over roughly the last year. Entry and exit days both count as full days. Trips outside Schengen (Ireland, Cyprus, UK) don't count.
Add a trip to begin
0
Days used
90
Days remaining
90
Longest trip if you left today
0 of 90 days used in the 180-day window
Your rolling 180-day window
Each bar is one day. Tall blue bars are days you were in Schengen; the red bar is your check date.
In Schengen Outside / free Check date
Earliest safe re-entry
—
for your planned trip length
If you entered on your check date
—
consecutive days you could stay
What happens if you overstay
Overstaying the 90-day limit is a breach of Schengen immigration rules. Depending on the country and how long you overstayed, you can face fines, a stamp/flag on your record, deportation, and an entry ban of up to several years across the whole Schengen area. From late 2025 the EU's Entry/Exit System (EES) records crossings biometrically, so overstays are logged automatically — there's no longer any margin for a missed passport stamp.
How the 90/180 rule actually works
You may spend a maximum of 90 days inside the Schengen area in any rolling 180-day period — not per country, but across all of them combined.
The 180-day window is not a fixed calendar block. On any given day, authorities look back 180 days and add up the days you were in Schengen. As old days drop off the back of the window, they free up again.
Both your day of arrival and your day of departure count as full days of presence.
A long trip and several short trips are treated exactly the same — only the total number of days matters.
Time in Ireland, Cyprus and the UK does not count towards your Schengen days.
This is a planning tool, not legal or immigration advice. Always confirm your dates against your passport stamps and the official EU short-stay calculator before you travel.