Start here
Start with your travel history.
Add your previous Schengen stays first. If you have not travelled recently, you can go directly to the next step below.
1Trips you already took
Add trips you have already made. Both your entry and exit days count toward your total.
| # | Entry | Exit | Country / Region(s) | Days |
|---|
2Enter your arrival date
Enter the date your current Schengen stay started to estimate how many days you likely have left.
2Add planned trips
Add future trips to see how they fit your balance — before you book anything.
| # | Entry | Exit | Country / Region(s) | Days | Status |
|---|
Your Schengen balance
Review your result, explore the calendar, or check the stay map.
3Your result
Your current 90/180 balance and the estimate after planned trips.
Timeline
Double-check your dates — entry and exit days both count, including short trips. This is an estimate to help you plan, not legal advice or an official ruling.
Daily Schengen Insight
Need to understand one exact date?
Open the calendar and select any day to see which stays are counted in that day’s rolling 180-day window.
Calendar view
Tap any day to understand the rolling 180-day window for that date.
Selected-day explanation
Educational estimate only. Not an official EU result or legal advice. Verify your travel record and official sources before relying on a plan.
Schengen stay map
Map your Schengen stays
Review your stays on the map by calendar entry. Multi-country entries stay compact in the overview and show their route only when you select that trip.
Travel planning tools
Test options before you book
Try different dates or lengths without changing your saved plan.
You know how long you want to stay — but not sure when you can safely enter. Enter your desired stay length and we will find the earliest estimated date that fits your 90/180 balance.
No commitment — this does not change your saved plan unless you choose to use the date.
Curious whether a 10-day trip works, or what happens if you extend to 30? Test it here without changing your saved plan.
This quick check uses your saved Schengen stays and shows how much estimated room you would have left.
No commitment, no changes to your plan — just a quick way to compare a possible stay against the dates you already entered.
Compare several departure dates using the same saved travel history as the baseline.
This helps you choose the option that leaves the safest remaining buffer before booking.
Compare several possible travel ideas against the same saved travel history. Instead of guessing which date is safer, you can see which option leaves the strongest 90/180 buffer before you book.
How this estimate works
For every day you check, this tool looks back 180 days and counts how many of those days were spent in the Schengen Area. Both your arrival and departure days count as full days.
What we used to calculate this: your latest saved exit date from previous trips. If you have not added any, we used today’s date.
Full 90-day start estimate: the earliest point at which a full 90-day stay might be possible. Shorter trips may open up sooner.
For an official reference, you can also check the European Commission's short-stay calculator.
When is this page useful?
Use this page when you are already in the Schengen Area and want a quick read on how many days you have left. It is different from the main calculator — this one focuses on today, not future planning.
What this estimate covers
This tool estimates your day count based on the dates you enter. It can help you understand roughly how much time remains, but it cannot confirm your legal status, visa conditions, residence rights, EES records, or any border decision. For anything that matters legally, check with official sources.
Current stay FAQ
Does today count?
Yes — if you are in the Schengen Area today, today counts as a full day in this estimate.
What if I entered before today?
Just enter the date you actually arrived. The calculator looks back 180 days from today and counts accordingly.
Can this give me my exact legal deadline?
No — this is an estimate, not an official record. Always verify with official sources before making decisions based on this date.