Flight Home from Schengen Area is past 90 days, but I will be travelling to other countries. Will this be a problem?



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I am spending 88 days in Italy, and then travelling for 2 weeks through the UK. It is surprisingly a lot cheaper to book a roundtrip ticket to Milan plus flights to and from Dublin than it is to book a flight to Milan and home from Dublin.



I will not be in the Schengen Area for longer than 88 days, but my flights will look like I am in Milan past the 90 day allowance.



Will this cause problems entering the country, or coming back to the US? Should I just cut my losses and spend the extra money on a multi-city flight?



Thanks!










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  • "my flights will look like I am in Milan past the 90 day allowance." - why? You are leaving Schengen for the CTA and it's clearly visible in your passport.
    – chx
    Nov 7 '17 at 17:04
















up vote
2
down vote

favorite












I am spending 88 days in Italy, and then travelling for 2 weeks through the UK. It is surprisingly a lot cheaper to book a roundtrip ticket to Milan plus flights to and from Dublin than it is to book a flight to Milan and home from Dublin.



I will not be in the Schengen Area for longer than 88 days, but my flights will look like I am in Milan past the 90 day allowance.



Will this cause problems entering the country, or coming back to the US? Should I just cut my losses and spend the extra money on a multi-city flight?



Thanks!










share|improve this question





















  • "my flights will look like I am in Milan past the 90 day allowance." - why? You are leaving Schengen for the CTA and it's clearly visible in your passport.
    – chx
    Nov 7 '17 at 17:04












up vote
2
down vote

favorite









up vote
2
down vote

favorite











I am spending 88 days in Italy, and then travelling for 2 weeks through the UK. It is surprisingly a lot cheaper to book a roundtrip ticket to Milan plus flights to and from Dublin than it is to book a flight to Milan and home from Dublin.



I will not be in the Schengen Area for longer than 88 days, but my flights will look like I am in Milan past the 90 day allowance.



Will this cause problems entering the country, or coming back to the US? Should I just cut my losses and spend the extra money on a multi-city flight?



Thanks!










share|improve this question













I am spending 88 days in Italy, and then travelling for 2 weeks through the UK. It is surprisingly a lot cheaper to book a roundtrip ticket to Milan plus flights to and from Dublin than it is to book a flight to Milan and home from Dublin.



I will not be in the Schengen Area for longer than 88 days, but my flights will look like I am in Milan past the 90 day allowance.



Will this cause problems entering the country, or coming back to the US? Should I just cut my losses and spend the extra money on a multi-city flight?



Thanks!







air-travel schengen






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asked Nov 7 '17 at 16:34









Anna Gill

111




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  • "my flights will look like I am in Milan past the 90 day allowance." - why? You are leaving Schengen for the CTA and it's clearly visible in your passport.
    – chx
    Nov 7 '17 at 17:04
















  • "my flights will look like I am in Milan past the 90 day allowance." - why? You are leaving Schengen for the CTA and it's clearly visible in your passport.
    – chx
    Nov 7 '17 at 17:04















"my flights will look like I am in Milan past the 90 day allowance." - why? You are leaving Schengen for the CTA and it's clearly visible in your passport.
– chx
Nov 7 '17 at 17:04




"my flights will look like I am in Milan past the 90 day allowance." - why? You are leaving Schengen for the CTA and it's clearly visible in your passport.
– chx
Nov 7 '17 at 17:04










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I fail to see where would a problem arise.



  1. When you enter the area first, you can show your intent of leaving 88 days later. Not that they will grill a US citizen much.


  2. When you leave the area, you have been there for 88 days.


  3. When you seek to re-enter the area... but you don't. You are transiting airside. And even if you wouldn't, you have a stamp in your passport showing entering the Republic Of Ireland which also shows leaving the Schengen area.






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    1 Answer
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    active

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    1 Answer
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    active

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    up vote
    4
    down vote













    I fail to see where would a problem arise.



    1. When you enter the area first, you can show your intent of leaving 88 days later. Not that they will grill a US citizen much.


    2. When you leave the area, you have been there for 88 days.


    3. When you seek to re-enter the area... but you don't. You are transiting airside. And even if you wouldn't, you have a stamp in your passport showing entering the Republic Of Ireland which also shows leaving the Schengen area.






    share|improve this answer
























      up vote
      4
      down vote













      I fail to see where would a problem arise.



      1. When you enter the area first, you can show your intent of leaving 88 days later. Not that they will grill a US citizen much.


      2. When you leave the area, you have been there for 88 days.


      3. When you seek to re-enter the area... but you don't. You are transiting airside. And even if you wouldn't, you have a stamp in your passport showing entering the Republic Of Ireland which also shows leaving the Schengen area.






      share|improve this answer






















        up vote
        4
        down vote










        up vote
        4
        down vote









        I fail to see where would a problem arise.



        1. When you enter the area first, you can show your intent of leaving 88 days later. Not that they will grill a US citizen much.


        2. When you leave the area, you have been there for 88 days.


        3. When you seek to re-enter the area... but you don't. You are transiting airside. And even if you wouldn't, you have a stamp in your passport showing entering the Republic Of Ireland which also shows leaving the Schengen area.






        share|improve this answer












        I fail to see where would a problem arise.



        1. When you enter the area first, you can show your intent of leaving 88 days later. Not that they will grill a US citizen much.


        2. When you leave the area, you have been there for 88 days.


        3. When you seek to re-enter the area... but you don't. You are transiting airside. And even if you wouldn't, you have a stamp in your passport showing entering the Republic Of Ireland which also shows leaving the Schengen area.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Nov 7 '17 at 17:06









        chx

        36.8k376181




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