Is the 90 days visa-waiver for the entire trip or for each country? [duplicate]
This question already has an answer here:
How does the Schengen 90/180 rule work?
5 answers
Suppose I fly to France and stay for 90 days. Then I cross into Spain by land, then fly to the Netherlands, then go to Norway. So the total trip length is much longer than 90 days. As long as I stay less than 90 days in each country individually, can I just take my American passport and not worry about anything? Or do I have to do some paperwork?
visas schengen us-citizens visas-on-arrival
marked as duplicate by JonathanReez♦, Gayot Fow
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Oct 23 '16 at 18:49
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
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This question already has an answer here:
How does the Schengen 90/180 rule work?
5 answers
Suppose I fly to France and stay for 90 days. Then I cross into Spain by land, then fly to the Netherlands, then go to Norway. So the total trip length is much longer than 90 days. As long as I stay less than 90 days in each country individually, can I just take my American passport and not worry about anything? Or do I have to do some paperwork?
visas schengen us-citizens visas-on-arrival
marked as duplicate by JonathanReez♦, Gayot Fow
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Oct 23 '16 at 18:49
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
add a comment |
This question already has an answer here:
How does the Schengen 90/180 rule work?
5 answers
Suppose I fly to France and stay for 90 days. Then I cross into Spain by land, then fly to the Netherlands, then go to Norway. So the total trip length is much longer than 90 days. As long as I stay less than 90 days in each country individually, can I just take my American passport and not worry about anything? Or do I have to do some paperwork?
visas schengen us-citizens visas-on-arrival
This question already has an answer here:
How does the Schengen 90/180 rule work?
5 answers
Suppose I fly to France and stay for 90 days. Then I cross into Spain by land, then fly to the Netherlands, then go to Norway. So the total trip length is much longer than 90 days. As long as I stay less than 90 days in each country individually, can I just take my American passport and not worry about anything? Or do I have to do some paperwork?
This question already has an answer here:
How does the Schengen 90/180 rule work?
5 answers
visas schengen us-citizens visas-on-arrival
visas schengen us-citizens visas-on-arrival
edited Oct 23 '16 at 18:48
RoflcoptrException
34.5k42167380
34.5k42167380
asked Oct 23 '16 at 18:43
Elliot GorokhovskyElliot Gorokhovsky
1194
1194
marked as duplicate by JonathanReez♦, Gayot Fow
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1 Answer
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Basically you can stay 90 days out of each 180 days in the whole of the Schengen area. That is no more than 90 days for all the countries you mention.
There is almost no way to extend that when your whole stay is within the Schengen area.
You may have to adjust your travel plans or look for the very few loopholes that do exist.
The UK is not part of the Schengen area, nor is Ireland, which may give you alternative destinations to reduce your time in the Schengen area.
Ok, then I'm good, my trip overall is less than 180 days. Could you give me a link explaining this?
– Elliot Gorokhovsky
Oct 23 '16 at 18:48
2
Based on your question, you are not good, look at the question they give the link for, when this is called a duplicate.
– Willeke♦
Oct 23 '16 at 18:51
@RenéG There are some countries where Americans can stay for up to 90 days even if they've already exhausted their 90-day stay in the Schengen area. But you would have to leave the Schengen area through one of these countries. I am fairly sure that Spain, the Netherlands, and Norway are not among them. If I am right about that, and you spent 90 days in France, you will not be able to avoid an overstay by traveling to any of those countries.
– phoog
Oct 23 '16 at 19:06
@Willeke based on another question by the same person, the person is actually a dual US/Polish citizen, so the 90/180 rule is actually completely irrelevant.
– phoog
Oct 24 '16 at 9:24
@phoog, no mention of any EU passport in the question and there is a clear mention of "can I just take my American passport" which I based my answer on.
– Willeke♦
Oct 24 '16 at 17:50
|
show 1 more comment
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Basically you can stay 90 days out of each 180 days in the whole of the Schengen area. That is no more than 90 days for all the countries you mention.
There is almost no way to extend that when your whole stay is within the Schengen area.
You may have to adjust your travel plans or look for the very few loopholes that do exist.
The UK is not part of the Schengen area, nor is Ireland, which may give you alternative destinations to reduce your time in the Schengen area.
Ok, then I'm good, my trip overall is less than 180 days. Could you give me a link explaining this?
– Elliot Gorokhovsky
Oct 23 '16 at 18:48
2
Based on your question, you are not good, look at the question they give the link for, when this is called a duplicate.
– Willeke♦
Oct 23 '16 at 18:51
@RenéG There are some countries where Americans can stay for up to 90 days even if they've already exhausted their 90-day stay in the Schengen area. But you would have to leave the Schengen area through one of these countries. I am fairly sure that Spain, the Netherlands, and Norway are not among them. If I am right about that, and you spent 90 days in France, you will not be able to avoid an overstay by traveling to any of those countries.
– phoog
Oct 23 '16 at 19:06
@Willeke based on another question by the same person, the person is actually a dual US/Polish citizen, so the 90/180 rule is actually completely irrelevant.
– phoog
Oct 24 '16 at 9:24
@phoog, no mention of any EU passport in the question and there is a clear mention of "can I just take my American passport" which I based my answer on.
– Willeke♦
Oct 24 '16 at 17:50
|
show 1 more comment
Basically you can stay 90 days out of each 180 days in the whole of the Schengen area. That is no more than 90 days for all the countries you mention.
There is almost no way to extend that when your whole stay is within the Schengen area.
You may have to adjust your travel plans or look for the very few loopholes that do exist.
The UK is not part of the Schengen area, nor is Ireland, which may give you alternative destinations to reduce your time in the Schengen area.
Ok, then I'm good, my trip overall is less than 180 days. Could you give me a link explaining this?
– Elliot Gorokhovsky
Oct 23 '16 at 18:48
2
Based on your question, you are not good, look at the question they give the link for, when this is called a duplicate.
– Willeke♦
Oct 23 '16 at 18:51
@RenéG There are some countries where Americans can stay for up to 90 days even if they've already exhausted their 90-day stay in the Schengen area. But you would have to leave the Schengen area through one of these countries. I am fairly sure that Spain, the Netherlands, and Norway are not among them. If I am right about that, and you spent 90 days in France, you will not be able to avoid an overstay by traveling to any of those countries.
– phoog
Oct 23 '16 at 19:06
@Willeke based on another question by the same person, the person is actually a dual US/Polish citizen, so the 90/180 rule is actually completely irrelevant.
– phoog
Oct 24 '16 at 9:24
@phoog, no mention of any EU passport in the question and there is a clear mention of "can I just take my American passport" which I based my answer on.
– Willeke♦
Oct 24 '16 at 17:50
|
show 1 more comment
Basically you can stay 90 days out of each 180 days in the whole of the Schengen area. That is no more than 90 days for all the countries you mention.
There is almost no way to extend that when your whole stay is within the Schengen area.
You may have to adjust your travel plans or look for the very few loopholes that do exist.
The UK is not part of the Schengen area, nor is Ireland, which may give you alternative destinations to reduce your time in the Schengen area.
Basically you can stay 90 days out of each 180 days in the whole of the Schengen area. That is no more than 90 days for all the countries you mention.
There is almost no way to extend that when your whole stay is within the Schengen area.
You may have to adjust your travel plans or look for the very few loopholes that do exist.
The UK is not part of the Schengen area, nor is Ireland, which may give you alternative destinations to reduce your time in the Schengen area.
answered Oct 23 '16 at 18:47
Willeke♦Willeke
31k1086163
31k1086163
Ok, then I'm good, my trip overall is less than 180 days. Could you give me a link explaining this?
– Elliot Gorokhovsky
Oct 23 '16 at 18:48
2
Based on your question, you are not good, look at the question they give the link for, when this is called a duplicate.
– Willeke♦
Oct 23 '16 at 18:51
@RenéG There are some countries where Americans can stay for up to 90 days even if they've already exhausted their 90-day stay in the Schengen area. But you would have to leave the Schengen area through one of these countries. I am fairly sure that Spain, the Netherlands, and Norway are not among them. If I am right about that, and you spent 90 days in France, you will not be able to avoid an overstay by traveling to any of those countries.
– phoog
Oct 23 '16 at 19:06
@Willeke based on another question by the same person, the person is actually a dual US/Polish citizen, so the 90/180 rule is actually completely irrelevant.
– phoog
Oct 24 '16 at 9:24
@phoog, no mention of any EU passport in the question and there is a clear mention of "can I just take my American passport" which I based my answer on.
– Willeke♦
Oct 24 '16 at 17:50
|
show 1 more comment
Ok, then I'm good, my trip overall is less than 180 days. Could you give me a link explaining this?
– Elliot Gorokhovsky
Oct 23 '16 at 18:48
2
Based on your question, you are not good, look at the question they give the link for, when this is called a duplicate.
– Willeke♦
Oct 23 '16 at 18:51
@RenéG There are some countries where Americans can stay for up to 90 days even if they've already exhausted their 90-day stay in the Schengen area. But you would have to leave the Schengen area through one of these countries. I am fairly sure that Spain, the Netherlands, and Norway are not among them. If I am right about that, and you spent 90 days in France, you will not be able to avoid an overstay by traveling to any of those countries.
– phoog
Oct 23 '16 at 19:06
@Willeke based on another question by the same person, the person is actually a dual US/Polish citizen, so the 90/180 rule is actually completely irrelevant.
– phoog
Oct 24 '16 at 9:24
@phoog, no mention of any EU passport in the question and there is a clear mention of "can I just take my American passport" which I based my answer on.
– Willeke♦
Oct 24 '16 at 17:50
Ok, then I'm good, my trip overall is less than 180 days. Could you give me a link explaining this?
– Elliot Gorokhovsky
Oct 23 '16 at 18:48
Ok, then I'm good, my trip overall is less than 180 days. Could you give me a link explaining this?
– Elliot Gorokhovsky
Oct 23 '16 at 18:48
2
2
Based on your question, you are not good, look at the question they give the link for, when this is called a duplicate.
– Willeke♦
Oct 23 '16 at 18:51
Based on your question, you are not good, look at the question they give the link for, when this is called a duplicate.
– Willeke♦
Oct 23 '16 at 18:51
@RenéG There are some countries where Americans can stay for up to 90 days even if they've already exhausted their 90-day stay in the Schengen area. But you would have to leave the Schengen area through one of these countries. I am fairly sure that Spain, the Netherlands, and Norway are not among them. If I am right about that, and you spent 90 days in France, you will not be able to avoid an overstay by traveling to any of those countries.
– phoog
Oct 23 '16 at 19:06
@RenéG There are some countries where Americans can stay for up to 90 days even if they've already exhausted their 90-day stay in the Schengen area. But you would have to leave the Schengen area through one of these countries. I am fairly sure that Spain, the Netherlands, and Norway are not among them. If I am right about that, and you spent 90 days in France, you will not be able to avoid an overstay by traveling to any of those countries.
– phoog
Oct 23 '16 at 19:06
@Willeke based on another question by the same person, the person is actually a dual US/Polish citizen, so the 90/180 rule is actually completely irrelevant.
– phoog
Oct 24 '16 at 9:24
@Willeke based on another question by the same person, the person is actually a dual US/Polish citizen, so the 90/180 rule is actually completely irrelevant.
– phoog
Oct 24 '16 at 9:24
@phoog, no mention of any EU passport in the question and there is a clear mention of "can I just take my American passport" which I based my answer on.
– Willeke♦
Oct 24 '16 at 17:50
@phoog, no mention of any EU passport in the question and there is a clear mention of "can I just take my American passport" which I based my answer on.
– Willeke♦
Oct 24 '16 at 17:50
|
show 1 more comment