Schengen 90/180 Day Calculator
Add your trips and instantly see how many of your 90 days you have used, how many remain, and the latest date you can legally stay until. Free, independent and private.
- Max stay
- 90 days
- Rolling window
- 180 days
- Countries
- 29
Your trips
Add every Schengen trip in the last 180 days. Leave the exit empty and tick “still there” for an ongoing stay. Entry and exit days both count.
Status on 11 Jun 2026
You're well within the limitCompliant: you have used 0 of 90 days in the 180-day window ending 11 Jun 2026.
Rolling window: 14 Dec 2025 → 11 Jun 2026. Both your entry and exit days count as full days.
Plan a future trip
Pick a planned entry date to see the latest date you could legally stay until, given your trips above.
Rolling 180-day window
Each square is one day of the 180-day window ending 11 Jun 2026.
Private by design:your trips are stored only in this page's link - never sent to a server, no account needed.
How the 90/180-day rule works
Most visa-exempt travellers can spend up to 90 days in the Schengen area within any 180-day period. The window is rolling: for any day you are in Schengen, you look back 180 days and add up the days you were present. That total must stay at or below 90.
Two details trip people up. First, both your entry day and your exit day count as full days - a weekend trip from Friday to Sunday is three days, not two. Second, leaving does not reset your count; you only get days back as older days roll out of the 180-day window. Planning a return trip? Our “when can I return” calculator works it out for you.
Frequently asked questions
What is the Schengen 90/180-day rule?
If you are a visa-exempt visitor (for example a US, UK, Canadian or Australian passport holder), you may stay in the Schengen area for a maximum of 90 days within any 180-day period. The 180 days are counted backwards from each day of your stay.
How does the rolling 180-day window work?
It is not a fixed calendar period and it does not reset on 1 January. For any given day, look back 180 days: the total days you were present in that window must not exceed 90. As old days drop off the back of the window, you regain that allowance.
Do entry and exit days both count?
Yes. Both the day you enter and the day you leave count as full days of presence, even if you only spend a few hours in the Schengen area. This calculator counts them exactly that way.
Which countries does the 90/180 rule cover?
The rule applies across the whole Schengen area - currently 29 countries (25 EU states plus Iceland, Norway, Switzerland and Liechtenstein). Your days are pooled across all of them: a week in France and a week in Italy is two weeks against your 90 days.
Does leaving and coming back reset my count?
No. Leaving the Schengen area does not reset anything - your past days stay in the 180-day window until they naturally roll off. You only regain days as time passes, not by crossing a border.
What happens if I overstay?
Overstaying can lead to fines, deportation and entry bans, and it is now recorded automatically by the EES biometric system rather than relying on passport stamps. See our Schengen overstay guide for details by country.
How is this different from a visa or ETIAS?
The 90/180 rule governs how long you can stay. ETIAS (expected last quarter of 2026) is a separate travel authorisation that will cost €20 - it is not a visa and does not change the 90-day limit. Learn more on our ETIAS page.
Is my trip data stored anywhere?
No. This calculator runs entirely in your browser. Your trips are encoded into the page link so you can bookmark or share a result, but nothing is ever sent to or stored on a server. There are no accounts and no tracking of your dates.
How do I count an ongoing trip I haven't left yet?
Leave the exit date blank and tick “still there”. The calculator counts every day up to the date you are checking - by default today - as a day of presence.
Does the new EES change how my days are counted?
The maths is unchanged - still 90 days in 180. What changed is enforcement: the Entry/Exit System (fully operational since April 2026) records your crossings biometrically, so your day count is now tracked automatically. See our EES guide.
Sources
- European Commission - Official Schengen short-stay calculator - verified 11 Jun 2026
- European Commission - The Schengen area - verified 11 Jun 2026
- European Commission - EES fully operational 10 April 2026 - verified 11 Jun 2026