Free Schengen 90/180 calculator

Schengen 90/180 Calculator

Enter your past and planned Schengen travel dates to see how many days you have left.

Step 1

Add your trips

Add every Schengen entry and exit. Entry and exit dates both count.

Step 2

Planning estimate only. Your visa sticker, passport, residence status, border record, or official authority guidance can be stricter than this calculator.

Official context

Built around the official 90/180 model.

TripMemo follows the public European Commission short-stay explanation: count back 180 days from each day of stay and keep the total at 90 or below.

The allowance is shared across participating Schengen countries.

Entry and exit dates count as stay days.

The 180-day period rolls daily.

Some visas or residence permits change the rule that applies to you.

Save the trip, not just the calculation

Once your dates work, save the route in TripMemo, keep memories by city, and turn the trip into a visual travel story later.

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SourceEuropean Commission short-stay calculator
UpdatedChecked on 28 April 2026
ScopeShort stays under the 90/180-day rule
Open official EU calculator

Common mistakes

The 90/180 rule is not a simple reset

Most Schengen overstay mistakes come from treating the allowance like a calendar rule. It is a rolling visa day counter across the whole Schengen Area.

Mistake: Thinking the 180 days reset when you leave

The window rolls every day. Old stay days only stop counting once they fall outside the 180-day lookback.

Mistake: Counting 90 days per Schengen country

France, Spain, Italy, Germany, Switzerland, Norway, and the rest of Schengen share one combined 90-day allowance.

Mistake: Ignoring arrival and departure dates

Entry and exit dates count as Schengen stay days, even if you only spend part of the day inside the zone.

Mistake: Using the wrong check date

Use today for current status, a planned entry date for re-entry planning, or a planned exit date to test a future stay.

Schengen countries

One allowance across the zone

Travelling from one Schengen country to another does not reset your 90 days.

Austria
Belgium
Bulgaria
Croatia
Czechia
Denmark
Estonia
Finland
France
Germany
Greece
Hungary
Iceland
Italy
Latvia
Liechtenstein
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Malta
Netherlands
Norway
Poland
Portugal
Romania
Slovakia
Slovenia
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland

FAQ

Schengen calculator questions

What is the Schengen 90/180 day rule?

Most short-stay visitors can spend up to 90 days in the Schengen Area within any rolling 180-day period. The 180-day window moves every day, so old stay days gradually drop out of the calculation.

Do entry and exit days count for Schengen?

Yes. A day normally counts as a Schengen stay day if you were present in the Schengen Area at any time on that date, including your entry and exit dates.

Does travelling between Schengen countries reset the count?

No. The allowance applies to the Schengen Area as a whole. Moving from one Schengen country to another does not reset the 90-day limit.

Does the 90/180 rule reset after I leave Schengen?

No. The Schengen allowance does not reset when you leave. It uses a rolling 180-day lookback, so older stay days gradually stop counting as time passes.

Is the Schengen rule 90 days per country?

No. The 90-day allowance applies across the Schengen Area as a whole. Time in France, Spain, Italy, Germany, Switzerland, Norway, and other Schengen countries counts toward the same limit.

Who is not usually subject to the Schengen 90/180 rule?

EU, EEA, and Swiss citizens are not subject to the short-stay 90/180 rule. Holders of EU residence permits or long-stay D visas may also be under different rules for the issuing country. Always verify your status with official guidance.

What is the check date or control date?

The check date, sometimes called the control date or reference date, is the date you want to calculate against. Use today for your current status, a planned entry date to test a future trip, or a planned exit date to check whether a stay remains compliant.

Is this Schengen calculator official legal advice?

No. TripMemo provides this calculator for planning only. Check your passport stamps, visa sticker, residence status, and official EU or border authority guidance before travelling.