If you spent 30 days in France and 20 days in Italy within the last 180 days, a Spain trip starts with 50 Schengen days already used.
Schengen 90/180 Day Calculator
Track your days in the Schengen area against the rolling 180-day window and know exactly how many days you have left.
Client-side calculation
Check your 90/180 stay limit
Window: -- to --
Add your Schengen stays and check a date to see your status.
Earliest re-entry estimate: --
The Schengen 90/180 rule explained.
Non-EU nationals can stay in the Schengen area for up to 90 days in any rolling 180-day window. This is not a calendar reset — the window moves forward each day, so at any given date you look back 180 days and count how many days you were present.
This tool counts the checks your entry and exit dates against the rolling window starting 179 days before your check date. If you are at or close to 90 days, consider leaving the Schengen area or checking your status with the official EU calculator.
Results are estimates only. Always verify your stay with the official EU short-stay calculator before making travel decisions.
How the rolling 180-day window moves every day.
These examples explain common searches such as 90 day rule Spain calculator, Schengen calculator UK, and Europe 90 day calculator. They are planning examples only; verify important trips with the official EU calculator.
Enter each Schengen entry and exit date separately. Weekend trips and longer holidays all count inside the same rolling window.
The limit does not reset on January 1. The calculator looks back 180 days from the check date and counts presence days in that window.
European Commission short-stay calculator.
Source: European Commission short-stay calculator, the official and authoritative source for Schengen stay calculations. Last reviewed: May 19, 2026. This tool provides planning estimates only. The official EU calculator is always authoritative for your stay limit.
Short-stay planning basics.
How does the Schengen 90/180 rule work?
On any check date, count the days you were present in the Schengen area during the previous 180 days, including the check date. If the count is 90 or less, you are within the standard short-stay limit.
Can this be used as a 90 day rule Spain calculator?
Yes for planning estimates. Spain is in the Schengen area, so the same rolling 90/180-day short-stay rule applies for eligible non-EU visitors. Always verify with the official EU calculator before making travel decisions.
Can UK travelers use this Schengen calculator?
Yes. UK travelers can use it to estimate short stays in the Schengen area after entering their entry and exit dates, but the official EU calculator remains the authoritative source.