Entering the Schengen area after being told I can't return to Spain

Entering the Schengen area after being told I can't return to Spain - Drone view of Spanish city with aged buildings and national flag under cloudy blue sky

I'm a United States citizen who returned from a trip to Spain this summer. The purpose of my trip was to take a Spanish course in Malaga. Allow me to explain my circumstances.

When I arrived at Madrid Bajaras on May 30, I mistakenly exited the airport security zone and had to re-enter. I was looking for a hotel and accidentally left the zone of the airport where my connecting flight to Malaga would depart from. When I attempted to enter the security zone again, the IO asked why I had an entry and exit stamp from the same day. I explained that I was lost in the airport looking for the Air Room Madrid Hotel. He reluctantly stamped my passport and allowed me to enter. From there I went to the hotel to sleep for a few hours before my connecting flight to Malaga, and I arrived safely and remained in Malaga without any issues.

The problem occurred when I left Spain from Malaga airport on July 14. The IO examined my passport and asked why I had two stamps from the same day, and I tried my best to explain in Spanish that I got lost in the Bajaras Airport looking for the hotel. (It's located in the basement.) He proceeded to question me about the purpose of my trip. I explained I was a student at a school in Malaga, and he asked me for a student identification card. I told him that I did not have an identification card because the Spanish Consulate website said U.S. citizens are not required to obtain a student visa or an identification card to study for fewer than 90 days. He insisted that schools give cards to foreign students.

The entire process was a nightmare because I was trying my best to speak to the IO in Spanish as best as I could because he didn't speak English, but his accent and rate of speech made me uncomfortable. After the line of questioning, the IO told me that I could not return to Spain until I bring him proof that I was a student, and he was insistent on an identification card. However, the only documents I possess from the school are a certificate of completion from the director, an attendance sheet with my grades for the class, coursework and a textbook from the class. The only thing I had in my hand luggage was the textbook, and I understand why that is insufficient proof. The good thing is I don't have a giant X or other mark on my passport.

I've contacted the Spanish Embassy in Houston through e-mail and explained all of this, and they simply told me that if it's true that I stayed fewer than 90 days in Spain, I could return to the country without a problem. However, their response didn't reassure me about returning to Spain because I'm afraid I've been banned from the country. The reason I'm asking is because one day I would like to continue traveling to Europe, and I'm nervous that I've been placed in the Schengen Information System for a violation. I'm planning a trip to Italy next summer as a tourist, and I'm afraid that I'll be denied entry at the border for what happened to me in Spain.

Based on this information, I hope someone would be willing to provide an educated guess to the following questions:

  1. Are certificates of completion, attendance, and coursework enough to prove I was a student at a language school in Malaga to Spanish authorities?

  2. Would I have difficulties entering another Schengen country because of my experience in Spain?

Thank you.



Best Answer

  1. More than probably, yes. A certificate of completion with a stamped date will for sure be enough information to prove you were there, and you took a course there. They will only have to call, at best, to make sure the certificate is legit.

  2. Request your summer Schengen tourist visa as soon as you can. if you receive it, it means you're clear to enter the country, and any other Schengen country. You might be in the SIS and be questioned on the prior issues if they're registered, but you can't be denied entry with a valid visa.

  3. Learn enough Italian / Spanish to request an English speaking border agent if things get complicated.If both countries operate the same way (I'm from Spain, been to Italy thrice), they'll both be slightly reluctant to do so, but will comply in the end.

IMPORTANT:

Unlike the USA and Russia, whom I know provide no data on it, not even to their own citizens, European countries must adhere to the European General Data Protection Act. It basically means you, as citizen, whether EU or not, have some rights in terms of accessing your information (and correcting it if necessary). Long story short, you can contact a SIS official representative on your country and request him to notify you of your status. It would be very strange that they would refuse to do it.

The only big downside is the possibility of them sending every document they have on you, and that means you could get a 200-page .pdf or printed folder. (If you request your Facebook data under the act, for example, you can get up to 10 A4 paper boxes of printed documents).

What is the procedure for requesting access to personal data in the SIS? If you believe your personal information has been misused, needs to be corrected or deleted, you can request access to and rectification of your data. If you are a third-country national you can address your request to the consulate of any Schengen State. If you are a citizen of a Schengen State you can either address your request directly to the competent national authority responsible for the issuance of the alert or indirectly to the national Data Protection Authority.

Guidelines on the national procedures for access requests have been compiled by the national Data Protection Authorities.

Although it directly refers to any Schengen consulate, if the Spanish or Italian consulates don't answer you, you also have the SIS data protection Third country (non EU; non Candidate) contacts:

http://ec.europa.eu/justice/data-protection/bodies/authorities/third-countries/index_en.htm




Pictures about "Entering the Schengen area after being told I can't return to Spain"

Entering the Schengen area after being told I can't return to Spain - Aerial Photography of City Buildings in Spain
Entering the Schengen area after being told I can't return to Spain - The Peix Sculpture by Frank Gehry in Barcelona
Entering the Schengen area after being told I can't return to Spain - Anonymous male standing in city district on sunny day



Can I leave the Schengen zone and come back?

If you leave the Schengen Zone, your time doesn't reset so it is really important that you keep track of how long you're in the Schengen Zone. If you're in the Schengen Zone for 90 days consecutively, you must leave after 90 days and can't return for another 90 days!

How do you get around the 90 day rule Schengen?

Well, you can tour around different Schengen member states like France, Spain, or Germany and by the time you hit your 90-day limit, go and hop over to a non-Schengen European country like Croatia, UK, North Macedonia, or Turkey to wait until you hit the 181st day so that you can come back to the Schengen Area again.

What happens if you exceed 90 days in Schengen?

The Schengen law states that you can't stay in the Area for more than 90 days. If you do, you're subject to a fine and possibly deportation and being banned from re-entering the Schengen Area. How that rule is enforced, though, varies greatly from one country to another.

Can I enter Spain with Schengen Visa?

The Schengen Visa allows tourists to visit Spain, and all the other countries in the Schengen Area, for periods of up to 90 days. If Spain is the main destination of a trip, travelers have to apply for the visa at a Spanish embassy or consulate in their home country.



THE SCHENGEN ZONE TRAVEL EXPLAINED - DIGITAL NOMAD TV




Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Images: Mikhail Nilov, Spolyakov, Tom D'Arby, Sinitta Leunen