Tools
Schengen 90/180 calculator
Enter your trips. See days used, days remaining, and project future trips. Stored in your browser — nothing leaves your device.
Result is informational. Verify with your travel records before making travel or filing decisions. Border officials use their own records.
Your Schengen window
0 / 90 days used
Days remaining
90
Window
13 Nov 2025 → 11 May 2026
If you stay continuously from today
until 8 Aug 2026 (90 days)
Earliest day you can be in Schengen again
today
Your trips
Each trip counts both entry and exit days. Stored locally in your browser only.
No trips yet. Add your past and future Schengen trips below.
Planning a future trip?
Enter the planned entry and exit dates to see your projected count.
Reference: the rolling window includes today + the previous 179 days (180 days total). Both arrival and exit days count as full days inside Schengen. For the official tool, see the EU short-stay visa calculator.
How the rule works (short version)
You can stay in the Schengen Area for up to 90 days in any rolling 180-day window — total, across all 29 member countries combined. Your arrival and departure days both count. The window slides forward every day; there's no calendar reset.
The most common mistake is treating it as a calendar-quarter allowance. It isn't. A heavy spring can lock you out of a summer trip.
Schengen calculator FAQ
How does the 90/180 day rule actually work?
Look back 180 days from any given day, including today. The total number of days you spent inside the Schengen Area in that window must not exceed 90. The window is rolling, not calendar-anchored — there is no January 1 reset.
Do arrival and departure days both count?
Yes. Both arrival and departure days count as full days inside Schengen. A two-night trip arriving Friday and leaving Sunday is 3 days, not 2.
Is the data I enter sent anywhere?
No. All trips are stored only in your browser's localStorage. Nothing is sent to DaysAbroad servers or anywhere else.
What if I overstay?
Overstays can result in fines, entry-record stamps, and multi-year Schengen-wide entry bans for longer overstays. They also complicate future visa applications. Always verify your current count before crossing a border.