Schengen 90/180 Day Calculator
Add your trips to the Schengen Area and instantly see how many of your 90 days you have used in the rolling 180-day window, how long you can stay, and when your days reset.
Up to 90 days in any rolling 180-day period across the Schengen Area.
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Example: stays inside your rolling 180-day window
How it works
How the Schengen 90/180 rule works
90 days in any 180
You may be present in the Schengen Area for at most 90 days within any 180-day stretch. The limit is shared across all 29 Schengen countries, so a week in Italy and a month in Portugal draw from the same 90-day allowance.
A rolling window
The 180 days are not a fixed block. On every day, immigration looks back over the previous 180 days and counts how many you spent inside the area. Older days keep dropping off, which is why the answer changes depending on the date you check.
Entry and exit days count
Both the day you arrive and the day you leave count as full days. This calculator counts them the same way, so the numbers match how a border officer would add up your stay.
Plan ahead
Use the planner to pick a future entry date and see the longest compliant stay from that day, plus the date your window fully resets if you stay out of the area.
FAQ
Schengen 90/180 FAQ
What is the Schengen 90/180 rule?
Short-stay visitors may spend up to 90 days inside the Schengen Area within any rolling 180-day period. The 90 days are shared across the whole area, so time in France, Spain, Germany and the other Schengen countries all counts together.
How is the 180-day period calculated?
It is a rolling window, not a fixed calendar period. On any given day you look back at the previous 180 days (including that day) and add up how many of them you spent in the Schengen Area. That total must not exceed 90. Because the window keeps moving, days drop off 180 days after each stay.
Do my arrival and departure days count?
Yes. The day you enter and the day you leave both count as full days of presence in the Schengen Area, even if you only spent a few hours in the country on those days.
Which countries are in the Schengen Area?
The Schengen Area covers most of the EU plus a few non-EU members (for example Switzerland, Norway, and Iceland), 29 countries in total as of 2024. The 90/180 limit applies to all of them combined, not to each country separately.
When does my Schengen time reset?
There is no fixed reset date. Each day you spent in the area frees up again exactly 180 days later. If you leave and stay out, your full 90 days become available 180 days after your most recent exit. This calculator shows that reset date for you.
Can I reset the clock by leaving and re-entering?
No. A quick trip out and back does not reset the count, because the rule always looks back over the previous 180 days. Leaving only helps once enough older days have rolled out of the window.
Does the rule apply to visa-free travelers as well as visa holders?
Yes. The 90-days-in-180 short-stay limit applies both to travelers from visa-exempt countries and to holders of a Schengen short-stay (type C) visa. A national long-stay visa or residence permit is separate and is not covered by this calculator.
What happens if I overstay the 90 days?
Overstaying can lead to fines, deportation, and an entry ban that makes future travel to the Schengen Area difficult. Treat the 90-day figure as a hard limit and leave a buffer where you can.
Guides by country
Heading somewhere specific? Each guide covers how the 90/180 rule plays out there, how to reset your window, and the visas that let you stay longer.
This calculator is a planning aid, not legal advice. Border officers make the final decision on entry and length of stay. Always confirm the rules with official government sources before you travel.