Use this free tool to check how many days you have left under the Schengen 90-days-in-any-180 rule. Enter each recent stay in the Schengen Area, add the date you plan to enter next, and we will show how many days you have used and the latest day you can stay.
In the 180 days before your planned entry date you will have used
of your 90 days.
You can stay up to — latest exit day .
You would have no days left on that date. The earliest you regain a day is .
Guidance only, based on the 90-days-in-any-180 rule for visa-free short stays and standard Type C visas. It does not account for visa validity dates, national visas, or bilateral agreements. Cross-check with the
official EU calculator before travelling.
How the rule is counted
The 180-day window is rolling: on every single day of your stay, the previous 180 days (including that day) must contain no more than 90 days inside the Schengen Area. Entry and exit days both count in full, and all 29 Schengen countries count as one zone.
This is why a long past trip can quietly limit a future one — days only “come back” as they fall out of the back of the window, one at a time. For a plain-English walkthrough with examples, read our guide to the 90/180-day rule explained.
Need more than 90 days?
If your plans do not fit inside 90 days — study, work, family, or a long stay — you likely need a national (Type D) long-stay visa instead. See our long stay and residence services, or contact us and we will point you at the right route.
Frequently asked questions
How does the 90/180-day rule work?
On any day you are in the Schengen Area, look back over the previous 180 days and add up every day you spent inside the area. That total must never exceed 90. The window rolls forward with you — it is not a calendar period and does not reset on 1 January.
Do arrival and departure days count?
Yes. The day you enter and the day you leave the Schengen Area both count as full days of stay, even if you only spend a few minutes there.
Which countries count towards the 90 days?
All 29 Schengen Area countries count as one zone. Days spent in EU countries outside Schengen, or in non-EU countries, do not count.
What happens if I overstay?
Overstaying can lead to fines, an entry ban, and problems with future visa applications. If the calculator shows you are close to the limit, plan your exit date carefully and keep evidence of your travel dates.
Is this calculator official?
No. It follows the same counting rules as the European Commission’s short-stay calculator, but it is provided for guidance only. Always cross-check with the official EU calculator and your passport stamps before travelling.