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Schengen Calculator by TotallyNomad

How many Schengen days do I have left?

The 90/180 rule is a rolling window, not a calendar reset — that’s the part people get wrong and overstay by accident. Add your trips and see exactly how many days you’ve used and how many remain.

The 90/180 rule in one line
Max 90 days of presence in any rolling 180-day period.
Entry day and exit day each count as a full day.
The window moves with you — old days drop off after 180 days.
Overstaying risks fines, deportation, and entry bans.

Your Schengen trips

Add every entry into and exit from the Schengen Area. Both dates count as days inside.

Check a planned trip

Test future dates against your history — we flag the exact day you’d cross 90.

Want this tracked automatically — with alerts?

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How the 90/180 rule actually works

It’s a rolling window
On any given day, count your days of presence in the Schengen Area over the previous 180 days (that day plus the 179 before it). That total must stay at or below 90. There is no January 1 reset.
Both travel days count
The day you enter and the day you leave each count as a full day inside the area — even if you only spent a few hours.
Days roll off after 180 days
As time passes, older days fall out of the back of the window and free up. That’s why your remaining days can go up even when you’re sitting still.
Which countries count
The Schengen Area is a shared zone — moving between, say, Portugal, Spain, France, and Germany does not reset anything. It’s one combined 90-day budget across all Schengen states.
Official EU short-stay calculator

Important limits

This calculator is an educational planning aid, not legal or immigration advice. It covers the standard Schengen 90/180 short-stay rule for visa-exempt visitors (including US passport holders). It does not account for residence permits, national long-stay visas, or bilateral visa-waiver exceptions. Always confirm your situation with official EU sources and the consulate of your destination before you travel.