eu calculator 90 days

EU 90/180 Day Calculator

Track your Schengen stay. Enter your past and planned trips, choose a reference date, and calculate how many days you have used in the last 180 days.

Trips (entry and exit dates are both counted)

What is the EU 90-day rule?

The phrase “EU calculator 90 days” usually refers to the Schengen 90/180 rule. If you are a non-EU visitor traveling visa-free (or on a short-stay visa), you can stay in the Schengen Area for up to 90 days in any rolling 180-day period.

The key word is rolling. It is not 90 days per calendar year and not 90 days per country. Border authorities review the previous 180 days from a given date and count how many of those days you were present in Schengen.

How this calculator works

Counting logic

  • Entry day counts as a full day.
  • Exit day also counts as a full day.
  • The calculator looks at the 180-day window ending on your chosen “as of” date.
  • It sums all overlap days from your trips within that window.
  • Maximum allowed: 90 days.

What you get in the result

  • Total days used in the rolling 180-day period.
  • Days remaining (or overstay amount if above 90).
  • The date when days may become available again (if currently at/above limit).

Why travelers use a Schengen 90/180 calculator

Manual counting gets tricky fast, especially with multiple entries and exits. A dedicated calculator helps digital nomads, frequent business travelers, retirees, and long-term tourists avoid accidental overstays and travel disruptions.

Even one miscounted day can create problems at border checks, including warnings, fines, entry bans, or future visa complications. Using a calculator before booking your next flight can save a lot of stress.

Practical example

Suppose you spent 40 days in spring and 35 days in summer. If you plan another trip in autumn, you might think “I still have 15 days left.” But depending on exact dates, some older days may have dropped out of the 180-day window, or maybe not yet. That is why date-accurate calculation matters.

Tips to stay compliant

  • Keep a running travel log (entry/exit dates and countries).
  • Recalculate before each new booking.
  • Do not assume all EU countries follow the same short-stay zone rules; Schengen membership is what matters here.
  • Save evidence of travel dates (boarding passes, stamps, e-gate records).
  • When in doubt, ask an immigration lawyer or official authority.

Important notes and disclaimer

This tool is for planning and educational use. Immigration decisions are made by official authorities, and rules can change. Some travelers have special statuses, residence permits, long-stay visas, bilateral agreements, or exceptions not handled by a simple calculator.

Always verify your eligibility with the relevant embassy, consulate, or immigration office before travel.

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