US citizen with my 90 days almost over - if I leave Italy and go to Croatia and back to Italy will my 90 days reset? [duplicate]
I've read a plethora of forums and websites on this topic. It appears that many experienced and recent travelers do this and there is no problem, especially from France, Italy, Spain and Germany. Yet, I'm in no position to take a serious chance and I do want to come back here as a self employed person, possibly get a Visa when I go back to the States. I would love if I could go hang out in Croatia for a few days and come back here and have my visitor pass renewed another 90 days. Getting close to the deadline to change my air ticket and I need a definite answer. I have read the legit country websites and rules and...still, is this possible? I'm guessing between Schengen and Non-Schengen zones and I being an American, they will run my passport through the digital stamp? OR --> Since I'm renting an apartment here and living underground a bit...chance the stay until June (arrived Jan 1)and chance they won't notice or care about my over-stay. Not ideal, since I want to return.
Best Answer
Unlike the US, Schengen doesn't have the notion of your "90-day period," and there's never anything to "reset" at some threshold. The Schengen rules are that you may not be in the Schengen area for more than 90 days in any 180-day period without a long-stay visa. It doesn't matter how long your stays are or where you go in between; what matters is the total number of days you're there out of 180 days. If you just spent 90 straight days in the Schengen area, it doesn't matter where you go next, but you can't reenter for 90 days. The only legal way around this is a long-stay visa.
As for consequences: I can't speak to practical border enforcement, but in general it's best to not be breaking the law in the hopes that you don't get caught. Especially if you intend to apply for a long-stay visa later, they may well give more scrutiny to your travel record, and overstays can make them worry that you won't leave when your long-stay visa is up.
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How does the 90 180-day rule work?
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.What happens if I stay in Europe for 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.Can you stay in Europe for more than 3 months after Brexit?
Now that the UK is outside the EU, British passport holders can stay for a maximum of 90 days per 180-day period. UK passport holders can cross an external EU border using just a valid passport and stay anywhere in the Schengen Area for up to 3 months.Can I spend more than 90 days in Croatia?
Visas. Croatia is not part of the Schengen area, Visits to Croatia do not count towards your 90-day visa-free limit in the Schengen area. Visits to other EU or Schengen countries do not count towards your 90-day visa-free limit in Croatia. You can travel to Croatia for up to 90 days in any 180-day period without a visa ...THE SCHENGEN ZONE TRAVEL EXPLAINED - DIGITAL NOMAD TV
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