Schengen short-stay planning

Schengen 90/180 day calculator

Add your past and planned Schengen trips to see days used, days remaining, overstay risk, and the next date you can safely re-enter.

Rules as of

Your trips

Entry and exit days are both counted. Same-day trips count as one day.

How the count works

The calculator builds a per-day occupancy map from your trips. For every day of presence it looks back across a rolling 180-day window and counts the occupied days inside it. If that count would exceed 90, the day is flagged as an overstay. Overlapping trips are de-duplicated so a day is never counted twice.

Next safe entry date

To find the next possible entry date, the engine simulates adding a new stay day on each future date until it finds a day where the rolling window stays at or below 90. This is the earliest date a fresh entry would not create an overstay, given your existing and planned trips.

FAQ

How does the Schengen 90/180-day rule work?

For any day you are present in the Schengen Area, look back at that day plus the previous 179 calendar days. Across that rolling 180-day window you must not exceed 90 days of presence. The allowance is shared across all Schengen countries combined.

Do entry and exit days count as full days?

Yes. Both the day you enter and the day you leave count as days of presence, even if you only spend a few hours in the area. A same-day entry and exit counts as one day.

Is the 90-day limit per country or for the whole area?

It is for the whole Schengen Area combined. Time spent in France, Germany, Spain, Italy and the other member states all draws down the same 90-day total.

Can this calculator replace official immigration advice?

No. It is a planning estimate. Border officers have discretion and your situation can depend on nationality, visa type, and residence status. Always confirm with the official Schengen and destination-country sources before you travel.

Disclaimer & sources

Estimate only — this is not immigration or legal advice. Rules as of . The 90/180 short-stay rule is set by the European Union; entry is ultimately at the discretion of border authorities and can depend on your nationality, visa, and residence status.

Official source: European Commission — Schengen visa policy .