Stay in the Schengen area for two consecutive 180-day periods [duplicate]

Stay in the Schengen area for two consecutive 180-day periods [duplicate] - Silver Macbook on Brown Wooden Table

Can I use a balance remaining from my first 180-day period and add 90 days from my second 180-day period, without leaving the Schengen area?



Best Answer

It's a sliding window, not a period

You may be thinking the 180 days are Jan. 1-July 1, or 6-month anniversaries or something. Not at all.

The 180 days in question are starting from 180 days ago. So August 20 through today (Feb 15). Tomorrow, the 180 days will be August 21 til tomorrow (Feb 16).

If 90 of those 180 days have been in Schengen, then you cannot enter Schengen today. If 60 of those 180 days were in Schengen, then you can spend 30 more days in Schengen as of today, and this gets to be re-evaluated day by day as past Schengen days may scroll off.

So for insatnce if you spent 88 days in Schengen, then spent 100 days outside of Schengen, then 80 of your last 180 days were in Schengen. But you can still stay for 90 days, because for the next 80 days, an in-Schengen days will slide out of the window as fast as new in-Schengen days accrue. So your day-count will remain at 80 until near the end, when the old in-Schengen days have entirely slid out of frame, and then only the new ones will count.




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How do you count 180 days in Schengen?

The 180 days are counted backward from the date you arrive and depart from the Schengen Area. Meaning, each time you enter or leave a Schengen Country, a new 180 day period will be calculated.

What is the Schengen 90 180 rule?

What is the Schengen 90/180 rule? Under the terms of Schengen, non-EEA nationals cannot spend more than a total of 90 days within a total period of 180 days without a visa. Furthermore, once you've used up your quota of 90 days, you cannot return to Schengen until 90 more days have passed.

Can I stay 180 days in Europe?

If you're a tourist, you do not need a visa for short trips to EU countries, Switzerland, Norway, Iceland or Liechtenstein. You can stay for up to 90 days in any 180-day period.

Can I stay in the Schengen Area more than 90 days?

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.



✈️ The 90 180 DAY RULE (Everything You Need to Know when Traveling to the Schengen Area)




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Images: cottonbro, cottonbro, Anastasia Shuraeva, cottonbro