Free tool
Schengen 90/180 calculator
Enter your stays, pick a planned entry date, and see exactly how many days you have left — including days that free up mid-stay as the rolling window moves.
1 · Your Schengen stays in the last months
Add every stay (entry and exit day both count as days spent). Leave empty if this is your first trip.
2 · Planned entry date
3 · Result
Days used in window
0
of 90, on 2026-06-10
Days available
90
entering on 2026-06-10
Stay until (latest)
2026-09-07
90 continuous days, window credits included
Based on the 90/180 short-stay rule (Regulation (EU) 2018/1806): on any day, your total days of presence in the Schengen area during the preceding 180-day window must not exceed 90. This calculator is an aid, not an official determination — border authorities decide.
How the 90/180 rule works
How does the 90/180 rule work?
On any given day of your stay, you look back over the previous 180 days: your total days of presence in the Schengen area within that window must not exceed 90. The window rolls forward every day, so old days gradually "fall out" and become available again.
Do entry and exit days count?
Yes. The day you enter and the day you leave both count as full days of presence in the Schengen area.
Does the rule apply if I have a national long-stay visa or residence permit?
Days spent in a Schengen country under a national long-stay visa (e.g. a digital nomad visa) or residence permit do not count against the 90/180 short-stay allowance for that country. The rule applies to visa-free short stays and Schengen C visas. Mixed situations can be complex — verify with the border authority.
Which countries are in the Schengen area?
As of 2026 the Schengen area comprises 29 countries, including most EU member states plus Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland. Ireland and Cyprus are EU members but not part of Schengen.
Is this calculator official?
No. It implements the calculation method of Regulation (EU) 2018/1806 faithfully and is tested against edge cases, but only border authorities make binding determinations. The EU Commission also publishes an official calculator.
Staying longer than 90 days?
The 90/180 rule only governs short stays. If you want to base yourself in Europe, a national digital nomad visa takes you out of the short-stay system entirely — compare the European programs here.