Entering and leaving Europe (i.e., the Schengen Zone) several times in a month










6















I will be giving several talks across Europe, US and Asia in a space of 70 days (2 months more or less). My itinerary starts in the Schengen area, then leads me to Asia and back to the Schengen area and then to the US and back to the Schengen Area and so on.



My question is whether I am going to have issues crossing the Schengen borders with all the entries, which is not supposed to happen since I will be exiting the Schengen area for the last time before the maximum permitted stay for my passport (Argentina).










share|improve this question
























  • Are you getting paid for these talks? If so you may need a special visa.

    – Burhan Khalid
    Jul 14 '16 at 6:30











  • Pretty good question. It's a part of my job and I'm getting payed but not by the organizers and not in the countries where the talks are.

    – mbalparda
    Jul 14 '16 at 12:51















6















I will be giving several talks across Europe, US and Asia in a space of 70 days (2 months more or less). My itinerary starts in the Schengen area, then leads me to Asia and back to the Schengen area and then to the US and back to the Schengen Area and so on.



My question is whether I am going to have issues crossing the Schengen borders with all the entries, which is not supposed to happen since I will be exiting the Schengen area for the last time before the maximum permitted stay for my passport (Argentina).










share|improve this question
























  • Are you getting paid for these talks? If so you may need a special visa.

    – Burhan Khalid
    Jul 14 '16 at 6:30











  • Pretty good question. It's a part of my job and I'm getting payed but not by the organizers and not in the countries where the talks are.

    – mbalparda
    Jul 14 '16 at 12:51













6












6








6








I will be giving several talks across Europe, US and Asia in a space of 70 days (2 months more or less). My itinerary starts in the Schengen area, then leads me to Asia and back to the Schengen area and then to the US and back to the Schengen Area and so on.



My question is whether I am going to have issues crossing the Schengen borders with all the entries, which is not supposed to happen since I will be exiting the Schengen area for the last time before the maximum permitted stay for my passport (Argentina).










share|improve this question
















I will be giving several talks across Europe, US and Asia in a space of 70 days (2 months more or less). My itinerary starts in the Schengen area, then leads me to Asia and back to the Schengen area and then to the US and back to the Schengen Area and so on.



My question is whether I am going to have issues crossing the Schengen borders with all the entries, which is not supposed to happen since I will be exiting the Schengen area for the last time before the maximum permitted stay for my passport (Argentina).







schengen europe borders repeat-visits






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













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share|improve this question








edited Jul 13 '16 at 20:57









Vince

16.3k769127




16.3k769127










asked Jul 13 '16 at 14:59









mbalpardambalparda

1476




1476












  • Are you getting paid for these talks? If so you may need a special visa.

    – Burhan Khalid
    Jul 14 '16 at 6:30











  • Pretty good question. It's a part of my job and I'm getting payed but not by the organizers and not in the countries where the talks are.

    – mbalparda
    Jul 14 '16 at 12:51

















  • Are you getting paid for these talks? If so you may need a special visa.

    – Burhan Khalid
    Jul 14 '16 at 6:30











  • Pretty good question. It's a part of my job and I'm getting payed but not by the organizers and not in the countries where the talks are.

    – mbalparda
    Jul 14 '16 at 12:51
















Are you getting paid for these talks? If so you may need a special visa.

– Burhan Khalid
Jul 14 '16 at 6:30





Are you getting paid for these talks? If so you may need a special visa.

– Burhan Khalid
Jul 14 '16 at 6:30













Pretty good question. It's a part of my job and I'm getting payed but not by the organizers and not in the countries where the talks are.

– mbalparda
Jul 14 '16 at 12:51





Pretty good question. It's a part of my job and I'm getting payed but not by the organizers and not in the countries where the talks are.

– mbalparda
Jul 14 '16 at 12:51










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















7














A non-visa national, such as Argentine nationals, can pass in and out of the zone as long as the 90/180 rule is observed AND the person satisfies the landing interview with a valid premise. As a general rule, all interaction with border officials is governed by personal impact and articulation skills (along with demonstrating an understanding of the rules), so be prepared for it.



In your case, you can present an itinerary of the talks you are giving along with any personal tourist side-trips you have planned.






share|improve this answer


















  • 3





    Nice, I have passed several borders several times so the interaction with the border officials does not scare me. I even have accommodation, a medical insurance and valid means to show I'm financially stable for the entire trip.

    – mbalparda
    Jul 13 '16 at 15:59










Your Answer








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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









7














A non-visa national, such as Argentine nationals, can pass in and out of the zone as long as the 90/180 rule is observed AND the person satisfies the landing interview with a valid premise. As a general rule, all interaction with border officials is governed by personal impact and articulation skills (along with demonstrating an understanding of the rules), so be prepared for it.



In your case, you can present an itinerary of the talks you are giving along with any personal tourist side-trips you have planned.






share|improve this answer


















  • 3





    Nice, I have passed several borders several times so the interaction with the border officials does not scare me. I even have accommodation, a medical insurance and valid means to show I'm financially stable for the entire trip.

    – mbalparda
    Jul 13 '16 at 15:59















7














A non-visa national, such as Argentine nationals, can pass in and out of the zone as long as the 90/180 rule is observed AND the person satisfies the landing interview with a valid premise. As a general rule, all interaction with border officials is governed by personal impact and articulation skills (along with demonstrating an understanding of the rules), so be prepared for it.



In your case, you can present an itinerary of the talks you are giving along with any personal tourist side-trips you have planned.






share|improve this answer


















  • 3





    Nice, I have passed several borders several times so the interaction with the border officials does not scare me. I even have accommodation, a medical insurance and valid means to show I'm financially stable for the entire trip.

    – mbalparda
    Jul 13 '16 at 15:59













7












7








7







A non-visa national, such as Argentine nationals, can pass in and out of the zone as long as the 90/180 rule is observed AND the person satisfies the landing interview with a valid premise. As a general rule, all interaction with border officials is governed by personal impact and articulation skills (along with demonstrating an understanding of the rules), so be prepared for it.



In your case, you can present an itinerary of the talks you are giving along with any personal tourist side-trips you have planned.






share|improve this answer













A non-visa national, such as Argentine nationals, can pass in and out of the zone as long as the 90/180 rule is observed AND the person satisfies the landing interview with a valid premise. As a general rule, all interaction with border officials is governed by personal impact and articulation skills (along with demonstrating an understanding of the rules), so be prepared for it.



In your case, you can present an itinerary of the talks you are giving along with any personal tourist side-trips you have planned.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jul 13 '16 at 15:53









Gayot FowGayot Fow

75.9k21199382




75.9k21199382







  • 3





    Nice, I have passed several borders several times so the interaction with the border officials does not scare me. I even have accommodation, a medical insurance and valid means to show I'm financially stable for the entire trip.

    – mbalparda
    Jul 13 '16 at 15:59












  • 3





    Nice, I have passed several borders several times so the interaction with the border officials does not scare me. I even have accommodation, a medical insurance and valid means to show I'm financially stable for the entire trip.

    – mbalparda
    Jul 13 '16 at 15:59







3




3





Nice, I have passed several borders several times so the interaction with the border officials does not scare me. I even have accommodation, a medical insurance and valid means to show I'm financially stable for the entire trip.

– mbalparda
Jul 13 '16 at 15:59





Nice, I have passed several borders several times so the interaction with the border officials does not scare me. I even have accommodation, a medical insurance and valid means to show I'm financially stable for the entire trip.

– mbalparda
Jul 13 '16 at 15:59

















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