ETIAS status:Not live·Expected launch: the last quarter of 2026
ETIAS Pro markETIASPro
ETIAS is not live yet · expected Q4 2026

Schengen 90/180 calculator

Add your recent and planned Schengen trips to see how many of your 90 days you have used and how many remain in the rolling 180-day window. It runs entirely in your browser, and ETIAS does not change this limit.

By the ETIAS Pro editorial teamChecked against official EU sourcesHow we keep this accurateLast reviewed: 11 June 2026

How to use it

Set the date you want to check, then add each Schengen trip’s entry and exit dates. The calculator counts days of presence in the 180 days ending on your chosen date and shows days used and days remaining of the 90-day allowance.

ETIAS at a glance

Status
Not live yet
Expected launch
Q4 2026
Applications open
Not yet
Official fee
Expected €20
Validity
3 years or until passport expiry
Stay limit
90 days in any 180-day period
Official application route
Official EU ETIAS website / app when live
Private help
ETIAS Pro may offer optional support when applications open

Your recent and planned Schengen trips

0 of 90 days used

In the 180-day window from 20 Dec 2025 to 17 Jun 2026, you have 90 days remaining of the 90-day allowance. Stays must keep within 90 days in any rolling 180-day period.

This is an estimate to help you plan. ETIAS does not extend the 90/180 limit. Always confirm against your passport stamps and official sources before you travel.

Embed this calculator on your site

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Free to use with the attribution link kept intact. Runs entirely in the reader’s browser; no data is sent to us.

How the 90/180 rule works

Visa-exempt travellers, such as UK, US, Canadian and Australian passport holders, can spend up to 90 days in any rolling 180-day period across the Schengen area. The window is not a fixed half-year that resets: it moves with every day, counted backwards from whatever date you pick. The limit applies to all Schengen countries combined, not to each country separately. For the full explanation, worked examples and edge cases, see our guide to the Schengen 90/180 rule.

Does ETIAS change the 90-day limit?

No. ETIAS is a pre-travel authorisation, not permission to stay longer. Once it is live, an approved ETIAS lets you travel to the Schengen area, but the 90/180 rule still caps how long you can remain. To stay beyond 90 days you need a national long-stay visa or residence permit. See whether you will need ETIAS for your trip.

Schengen calculator FAQs

What is the 90/180-day Schengen rule?

ETIAS-eligible travellers can stay in the Schengen area for a maximum of 90 days within any rolling 180-day window. ETIAS does not extend that limit; it only authorises short stays within the existing rules.

Is ETIAS a visa?

Technically no. ETIAS is a travel authorisation, not a visa. Many travellers search for “ETIAS visa” or “Europe visa waiver”. The closest comparison is the US ESTA system. You still need a valid passport, and ETIAS does not guarantee entry: border officers always make the final decision.

How long will ETIAS last?

An approved ETIAS is expected to be valid for up to 3 years, or until the passport it is linked to expires, whichever comes first. It allows short stays of up to 90 days in any 180-day period within ETIAS countries.

I am a non-EU citizen living in an EU country. Do I need ETIAS?

No. If you hold a residence permit or a long-stay visa from an EU country, you travel on that document rather than ETIAS. ETIAS only applies to visa-exempt visitors making short stays, not to residents.