Tool · Schengen calculator
Schengen 90/180-day calculator
Add your trips and see how many of your 90 days you've used in the rolling 180-day period — and how many you have left. Runs in your browser; nothing is stored.
Add each stay in the Schengen area. Entry and exit days both count.
- Trip 10 day(s) counted in the 180-day window
Within the 90-day limit.
180-day window: 6 Dec 2025 – 3 Jun 2026.
This is a planning estimate, not legal advice. The 90/180 rule applies across the whole Schengen area, and border officers make the final assessment. Double-check before you travel.
How the rule works
90 days in any rolling 180
The 90/180 rule isn't a fixed calendar half-year. For any given day, you look back over the previous 180 days and count how many you spent in the Schengen area — that total can never exceed 90. Both your entry and exit days count, and days in every Schengen country add up to the same total.
For the full explanation with worked examples, see the 90/180-day rule guide. If you're applying for a visa, start with the document checklist or the Schengen-from-the-UK hub.
Common questions
- What is the Schengen 90/180-day rule?
- You can be present in the Schengen area for at most 90 days within any rolling 180-day period. It's not a fixed calendar half-year — for any given day, you look back over the previous 180 days and count how many you were present. Both your entry day and exit day count as days of presence.
- How does this calculator work?
- Add each trip's entry and exit dates and pick a date to check. The calculator counts the days from your trips that fall inside the 180-day window ending on that date, then shows how many of your 90 days you've used and how many remain.
- Do the entry and exit days both count?
- Yes. The day you enter the Schengen area and the day you leave both count as days of presence, even if you only spend part of those days in the area.
- Does the 90/180 rule apply per country or to the whole Schengen area?
- To the whole area combined — not per country. Days spent in France, Italy, Germany and any other Schengen states all count toward the same 90-day total.
- What happens if I overstay the 90 days?
- Overstaying can lead to fines, deportation, and an entry ban that affects future trips and visa applications. If you're close to the limit, plan carefully and check before you travel — border officers make the final assessment.