How can Americans visit Europe with as much flexibility and convenience as possible? [closed]










9















These questions might be complicated, so if you can even point me in the direction of someone who knows the answers, I'd appreciate it.



My girlfriend and I are both Americans and currently live in San Diego, and we each have a Global Entry card and new USA passports.



We own and operate a business (LLC) that we operate remotely (online and over the phone). I.e. we're self-employed and have money saved up; I think countries won't fear that we lack the financial resources to go back home to the USA.



We want to buy a 1-way ticket to Europe and explore for a while and then relocate back to the USA (probably San Diego again).



We definitely want to visit France and Italy and probably some other countries within the Schengen Area (Belgium, Switzerland, Netherlands, Germany, Greece) and maybe even some other non-Schengen countries (Ireland, Croatia, United Kingdom).



I worry that having no specific plans (timeline, accommodations, travel) will be problematic with immigration officials of various countries.



Simplest Scenario



The EU Immigration Portal says:




"If you are planning a short stay of up to three months in any
six-month period of time in an EU country... You will not need a visa
to enter the EU if you are from United States of America."




So, if we could commit to spending no more than 90 days in Europe and not travelling to any non-Schengen countries, could we just buy a 1-way flight to France (without any kind of bureaucracy such as applying for a visa)?



What would our border crossing experience in France be like (since we'd only have a short hotel stay reserved and no booked plans to leave yet)?



And if we tried to rent an apartment there for a month or two, would landlords and the government allow it?



Would our travel to other Schengen countries be straightforward and hassle-free if we wanted to live in Italy for a month, for example?



Other Scenario



What if we love our time in Europe and want to stay in the EU for more than 90 days (maybe 9 months instead of 3)?



It seems that even a long-stay visa only allows travelling in the Schengen Area "for up 3 months during a six-month period of time".



So if we wanted to live in Europe for 9 months, then 6 of those months would have to be in the country that granted us the long-stay visa?










share|improve this question















closed as off-topic by JonathanReez, Willeke, JoErNanO, Gayot Fow, Tor-Einar Jarnbjo May 9 '16 at 12:51


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Questions about immigration or moving for extended periods of time (studies or employment, among others) are off-topic. Our sister site, Expatriates Stack Exchange might be a better place to ask. See also the meta post Is it OK to ask questions about immigration?." – Willeke, JoErNanO, Gayot Fow
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.











  • 3





    I have edited your question to replace 'Customs' with the 'immigration' related term. "Customs" are the agency that taxes your souvenirs and electronics. Immigration is the agency that inspects your passport and stamps you in.

    – Gayot Fow
    May 9 '16 at 4:16






  • 1





    Those long stay visas you're referring to are category "D" and are not in the Schengen regime, those are issued by the individual countries for work, education, performing arts, etc.

    – Gayot Fow
    May 9 '16 at 4:21






  • 3





    One you get into the Schengen area you won't have trouble moving around within it, as there are no regular controls and random checks will be concerned only with whether you've overstayed. You could be denied entry if you don't have definite plans to leave within 90 days, however, though with a US passport it's less likely. Questions about long-stay visas should go to expatriates.stackexchange.com.

    – phoog
    May 9 '16 at 4:21






  • 2





    @phoog, I agree. I was thinking those visas have mobility restrictions which essentially defeat the OP's objectives. And yeah, he should take it to Expats, since he's essentially wanting to be one. expatriates.stackexchange.com/questions

    – Gayot Fow
    May 9 '16 at 4:25






  • 4





    When you say "relocate back to the USA", that sounds like you feel you'll be relocating to Europe. Relocation and going for a holiday are two very different things. When you visit another country, the expectation is that you remain resident in the country you came from; "relocating" sounds a lot like you're moving your residence. In particular, if you won't have a home to go back to in San Diego, I imagine that immigration officials will feel you have little incentive to leave Europe.

    – David Richerby
    May 9 '16 at 6:15















9















These questions might be complicated, so if you can even point me in the direction of someone who knows the answers, I'd appreciate it.



My girlfriend and I are both Americans and currently live in San Diego, and we each have a Global Entry card and new USA passports.



We own and operate a business (LLC) that we operate remotely (online and over the phone). I.e. we're self-employed and have money saved up; I think countries won't fear that we lack the financial resources to go back home to the USA.



We want to buy a 1-way ticket to Europe and explore for a while and then relocate back to the USA (probably San Diego again).



We definitely want to visit France and Italy and probably some other countries within the Schengen Area (Belgium, Switzerland, Netherlands, Germany, Greece) and maybe even some other non-Schengen countries (Ireland, Croatia, United Kingdom).



I worry that having no specific plans (timeline, accommodations, travel) will be problematic with immigration officials of various countries.



Simplest Scenario



The EU Immigration Portal says:




"If you are planning a short stay of up to three months in any
six-month period of time in an EU country... You will not need a visa
to enter the EU if you are from United States of America."




So, if we could commit to spending no more than 90 days in Europe and not travelling to any non-Schengen countries, could we just buy a 1-way flight to France (without any kind of bureaucracy such as applying for a visa)?



What would our border crossing experience in France be like (since we'd only have a short hotel stay reserved and no booked plans to leave yet)?



And if we tried to rent an apartment there for a month or two, would landlords and the government allow it?



Would our travel to other Schengen countries be straightforward and hassle-free if we wanted to live in Italy for a month, for example?



Other Scenario



What if we love our time in Europe and want to stay in the EU for more than 90 days (maybe 9 months instead of 3)?



It seems that even a long-stay visa only allows travelling in the Schengen Area "for up 3 months during a six-month period of time".



So if we wanted to live in Europe for 9 months, then 6 of those months would have to be in the country that granted us the long-stay visa?










share|improve this question















closed as off-topic by JonathanReez, Willeke, JoErNanO, Gayot Fow, Tor-Einar Jarnbjo May 9 '16 at 12:51


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Questions about immigration or moving for extended periods of time (studies or employment, among others) are off-topic. Our sister site, Expatriates Stack Exchange might be a better place to ask. See also the meta post Is it OK to ask questions about immigration?." – Willeke, JoErNanO, Gayot Fow
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.











  • 3





    I have edited your question to replace 'Customs' with the 'immigration' related term. "Customs" are the agency that taxes your souvenirs and electronics. Immigration is the agency that inspects your passport and stamps you in.

    – Gayot Fow
    May 9 '16 at 4:16






  • 1





    Those long stay visas you're referring to are category "D" and are not in the Schengen regime, those are issued by the individual countries for work, education, performing arts, etc.

    – Gayot Fow
    May 9 '16 at 4:21






  • 3





    One you get into the Schengen area you won't have trouble moving around within it, as there are no regular controls and random checks will be concerned only with whether you've overstayed. You could be denied entry if you don't have definite plans to leave within 90 days, however, though with a US passport it's less likely. Questions about long-stay visas should go to expatriates.stackexchange.com.

    – phoog
    May 9 '16 at 4:21






  • 2





    @phoog, I agree. I was thinking those visas have mobility restrictions which essentially defeat the OP's objectives. And yeah, he should take it to Expats, since he's essentially wanting to be one. expatriates.stackexchange.com/questions

    – Gayot Fow
    May 9 '16 at 4:25






  • 4





    When you say "relocate back to the USA", that sounds like you feel you'll be relocating to Europe. Relocation and going for a holiday are two very different things. When you visit another country, the expectation is that you remain resident in the country you came from; "relocating" sounds a lot like you're moving your residence. In particular, if you won't have a home to go back to in San Diego, I imagine that immigration officials will feel you have little incentive to leave Europe.

    – David Richerby
    May 9 '16 at 6:15













9












9








9








These questions might be complicated, so if you can even point me in the direction of someone who knows the answers, I'd appreciate it.



My girlfriend and I are both Americans and currently live in San Diego, and we each have a Global Entry card and new USA passports.



We own and operate a business (LLC) that we operate remotely (online and over the phone). I.e. we're self-employed and have money saved up; I think countries won't fear that we lack the financial resources to go back home to the USA.



We want to buy a 1-way ticket to Europe and explore for a while and then relocate back to the USA (probably San Diego again).



We definitely want to visit France and Italy and probably some other countries within the Schengen Area (Belgium, Switzerland, Netherlands, Germany, Greece) and maybe even some other non-Schengen countries (Ireland, Croatia, United Kingdom).



I worry that having no specific plans (timeline, accommodations, travel) will be problematic with immigration officials of various countries.



Simplest Scenario



The EU Immigration Portal says:




"If you are planning a short stay of up to three months in any
six-month period of time in an EU country... You will not need a visa
to enter the EU if you are from United States of America."




So, if we could commit to spending no more than 90 days in Europe and not travelling to any non-Schengen countries, could we just buy a 1-way flight to France (without any kind of bureaucracy such as applying for a visa)?



What would our border crossing experience in France be like (since we'd only have a short hotel stay reserved and no booked plans to leave yet)?



And if we tried to rent an apartment there for a month or two, would landlords and the government allow it?



Would our travel to other Schengen countries be straightforward and hassle-free if we wanted to live in Italy for a month, for example?



Other Scenario



What if we love our time in Europe and want to stay in the EU for more than 90 days (maybe 9 months instead of 3)?



It seems that even a long-stay visa only allows travelling in the Schengen Area "for up 3 months during a six-month period of time".



So if we wanted to live in Europe for 9 months, then 6 of those months would have to be in the country that granted us the long-stay visa?










share|improve this question
















These questions might be complicated, so if you can even point me in the direction of someone who knows the answers, I'd appreciate it.



My girlfriend and I are both Americans and currently live in San Diego, and we each have a Global Entry card and new USA passports.



We own and operate a business (LLC) that we operate remotely (online and over the phone). I.e. we're self-employed and have money saved up; I think countries won't fear that we lack the financial resources to go back home to the USA.



We want to buy a 1-way ticket to Europe and explore for a while and then relocate back to the USA (probably San Diego again).



We definitely want to visit France and Italy and probably some other countries within the Schengen Area (Belgium, Switzerland, Netherlands, Germany, Greece) and maybe even some other non-Schengen countries (Ireland, Croatia, United Kingdom).



I worry that having no specific plans (timeline, accommodations, travel) will be problematic with immigration officials of various countries.



Simplest Scenario



The EU Immigration Portal says:




"If you are planning a short stay of up to three months in any
six-month period of time in an EU country... You will not need a visa
to enter the EU if you are from United States of America."




So, if we could commit to spending no more than 90 days in Europe and not travelling to any non-Schengen countries, could we just buy a 1-way flight to France (without any kind of bureaucracy such as applying for a visa)?



What would our border crossing experience in France be like (since we'd only have a short hotel stay reserved and no booked plans to leave yet)?



And if we tried to rent an apartment there for a month or two, would landlords and the government allow it?



Would our travel to other Schengen countries be straightforward and hassle-free if we wanted to live in Italy for a month, for example?



Other Scenario



What if we love our time in Europe and want to stay in the EU for more than 90 days (maybe 9 months instead of 3)?



It seems that even a long-stay visa only allows travelling in the Schengen Area "for up 3 months during a six-month period of time".



So if we wanted to live in Europe for 9 months, then 6 of those months would have to be in the country that granted us the long-stay visa?







visas schengen europe visa-free-entry long-stay-visas






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited May 9 '16 at 10:20









CMaster

10.7k44792




10.7k44792










asked May 9 '16 at 4:03









RyanRyan

1634




1634




closed as off-topic by JonathanReez, Willeke, JoErNanO, Gayot Fow, Tor-Einar Jarnbjo May 9 '16 at 12:51


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Questions about immigration or moving for extended periods of time (studies or employment, among others) are off-topic. Our sister site, Expatriates Stack Exchange might be a better place to ask. See also the meta post Is it OK to ask questions about immigration?." – Willeke, JoErNanO, Gayot Fow
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.







closed as off-topic by JonathanReez, Willeke, JoErNanO, Gayot Fow, Tor-Einar Jarnbjo May 9 '16 at 12:51


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Questions about immigration or moving for extended periods of time (studies or employment, among others) are off-topic. Our sister site, Expatriates Stack Exchange might be a better place to ask. See also the meta post Is it OK to ask questions about immigration?." – Willeke, JoErNanO, Gayot Fow
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.







  • 3





    I have edited your question to replace 'Customs' with the 'immigration' related term. "Customs" are the agency that taxes your souvenirs and electronics. Immigration is the agency that inspects your passport and stamps you in.

    – Gayot Fow
    May 9 '16 at 4:16






  • 1





    Those long stay visas you're referring to are category "D" and are not in the Schengen regime, those are issued by the individual countries for work, education, performing arts, etc.

    – Gayot Fow
    May 9 '16 at 4:21






  • 3





    One you get into the Schengen area you won't have trouble moving around within it, as there are no regular controls and random checks will be concerned only with whether you've overstayed. You could be denied entry if you don't have definite plans to leave within 90 days, however, though with a US passport it's less likely. Questions about long-stay visas should go to expatriates.stackexchange.com.

    – phoog
    May 9 '16 at 4:21






  • 2





    @phoog, I agree. I was thinking those visas have mobility restrictions which essentially defeat the OP's objectives. And yeah, he should take it to Expats, since he's essentially wanting to be one. expatriates.stackexchange.com/questions

    – Gayot Fow
    May 9 '16 at 4:25






  • 4





    When you say "relocate back to the USA", that sounds like you feel you'll be relocating to Europe. Relocation and going for a holiday are two very different things. When you visit another country, the expectation is that you remain resident in the country you came from; "relocating" sounds a lot like you're moving your residence. In particular, if you won't have a home to go back to in San Diego, I imagine that immigration officials will feel you have little incentive to leave Europe.

    – David Richerby
    May 9 '16 at 6:15












  • 3





    I have edited your question to replace 'Customs' with the 'immigration' related term. "Customs" are the agency that taxes your souvenirs and electronics. Immigration is the agency that inspects your passport and stamps you in.

    – Gayot Fow
    May 9 '16 at 4:16






  • 1





    Those long stay visas you're referring to are category "D" and are not in the Schengen regime, those are issued by the individual countries for work, education, performing arts, etc.

    – Gayot Fow
    May 9 '16 at 4:21






  • 3





    One you get into the Schengen area you won't have trouble moving around within it, as there are no regular controls and random checks will be concerned only with whether you've overstayed. You could be denied entry if you don't have definite plans to leave within 90 days, however, though with a US passport it's less likely. Questions about long-stay visas should go to expatriates.stackexchange.com.

    – phoog
    May 9 '16 at 4:21






  • 2





    @phoog, I agree. I was thinking those visas have mobility restrictions which essentially defeat the OP's objectives. And yeah, he should take it to Expats, since he's essentially wanting to be one. expatriates.stackexchange.com/questions

    – Gayot Fow
    May 9 '16 at 4:25






  • 4





    When you say "relocate back to the USA", that sounds like you feel you'll be relocating to Europe. Relocation and going for a holiday are two very different things. When you visit another country, the expectation is that you remain resident in the country you came from; "relocating" sounds a lot like you're moving your residence. In particular, if you won't have a home to go back to in San Diego, I imagine that immigration officials will feel you have little incentive to leave Europe.

    – David Richerby
    May 9 '16 at 6:15







3




3





I have edited your question to replace 'Customs' with the 'immigration' related term. "Customs" are the agency that taxes your souvenirs and electronics. Immigration is the agency that inspects your passport and stamps you in.

– Gayot Fow
May 9 '16 at 4:16





I have edited your question to replace 'Customs' with the 'immigration' related term. "Customs" are the agency that taxes your souvenirs and electronics. Immigration is the agency that inspects your passport and stamps you in.

– Gayot Fow
May 9 '16 at 4:16




1




1





Those long stay visas you're referring to are category "D" and are not in the Schengen regime, those are issued by the individual countries for work, education, performing arts, etc.

– Gayot Fow
May 9 '16 at 4:21





Those long stay visas you're referring to are category "D" and are not in the Schengen regime, those are issued by the individual countries for work, education, performing arts, etc.

– Gayot Fow
May 9 '16 at 4:21




3




3





One you get into the Schengen area you won't have trouble moving around within it, as there are no regular controls and random checks will be concerned only with whether you've overstayed. You could be denied entry if you don't have definite plans to leave within 90 days, however, though with a US passport it's less likely. Questions about long-stay visas should go to expatriates.stackexchange.com.

– phoog
May 9 '16 at 4:21





One you get into the Schengen area you won't have trouble moving around within it, as there are no regular controls and random checks will be concerned only with whether you've overstayed. You could be denied entry if you don't have definite plans to leave within 90 days, however, though with a US passport it's less likely. Questions about long-stay visas should go to expatriates.stackexchange.com.

– phoog
May 9 '16 at 4:21




2




2





@phoog, I agree. I was thinking those visas have mobility restrictions which essentially defeat the OP's objectives. And yeah, he should take it to Expats, since he's essentially wanting to be one. expatriates.stackexchange.com/questions

– Gayot Fow
May 9 '16 at 4:25





@phoog, I agree. I was thinking those visas have mobility restrictions which essentially defeat the OP's objectives. And yeah, he should take it to Expats, since he's essentially wanting to be one. expatriates.stackexchange.com/questions

– Gayot Fow
May 9 '16 at 4:25




4




4





When you say "relocate back to the USA", that sounds like you feel you'll be relocating to Europe. Relocation and going for a holiday are two very different things. When you visit another country, the expectation is that you remain resident in the country you came from; "relocating" sounds a lot like you're moving your residence. In particular, if you won't have a home to go back to in San Diego, I imagine that immigration officials will feel you have little incentive to leave Europe.

– David Richerby
May 9 '16 at 6:15





When you say "relocate back to the USA", that sounds like you feel you'll be relocating to Europe. Relocation and going for a holiday are two very different things. When you visit another country, the expectation is that you remain resident in the country you came from; "relocating" sounds a lot like you're moving your residence. In particular, if you won't have a home to go back to in San Diego, I imagine that immigration officials will feel you have little incentive to leave Europe.

– David Richerby
May 9 '16 at 6:15










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















16














There's several approaches you can take. They all involve some planning, and there are some extra marks of caution.



  • Mix Schengen and non-schengen stays. The actual Schengen rules say for any given day in the Schengen area, you must have spent less than 90 out of the 180 preceeding days in the Schengen area. The EU even provides a calculator to help with this. So, you can make journeys to other places a US citizen can visit in between Schengen stays. The UK and Ireland are popular with Americans. The former Yugoslav states and Bulgaria and Romanina are usually quite accepting also. I think the visa-free stays are shorter, but you can also go to North Africa (although there are security concerns in some parts of some of these destinations).


  • Take advantage of pre-Schengen bilateral agreements between the US and European nations. These can be used to extend your stay in that country beyond the 90 days. Note that you cannot use these as part of a "swap" Stratergy as you could with visits to the UK, as you remain within Schengen, thus accumulating days against the 90/180 counter making it illegal for you to go back to non-bilateral Schengen nations, even while your stay remains legal.


  • Investigate if you have any claims to EU citizenship. The rules vary from EU nation to EU nation, but if either of you have say, grandparents from an EU nation, you may be able to claim citizenship there. This would allow you to stay in the EU indefintley (provided you could support yourself), and make remaining in non-EU Schengen states easier. It would also remove the issue (discussed further below) that you would not be able to (legally) operate your business while in Europe (well, for EU members. You may still have to stop working when in Switzerland/Norway).

  • Look in to a variety of long-stay "D" type Schengen visas. These allow you to stay for the duration in the country that awards them (different countries have different rules), and only apply the 90-in-180 for journeys to other parts of the Schengen zone.

  • Look in to actually emigrating, as that seems more like what you want to do. (Certainly your language is suggesting that). If you are fairly wealthy, this is often not too difficult (depending on just how wealthy, you might even be able to "buy" your way to citizenship with a large enough investment.). If you can get a residence permit, then things look similar to how they do on the long-stay visas mentioned above.

Important Note



As has been mentioned above in this answer, and in other answers, you need to be careful that you are funding this visit through savings from your remote business, and not continuing to run it. Exactly how much trouble you get in to depends on if you are caught, and which country/border agent by, but note that working (including remote working), is no permitted by the visa-free entry that US citizens receive to the Schengen area, nor to several neighbouring states. See this question about a couple who tried to run their remote business in the UK (non Schengen, but operates similar rules, although the UK does seem especially strict on the working restrictions).






share|improve this answer
































    10














    If you plan to "operate" your business over the phone, you might actually be working in Europe. That's not what a tourist does. There could be tax consequences, both home and abroad.



    If you can refrain from working on your business on your holiday, options might be:



    • Apply for D visa for France or Italy, then only time in other countries counts against the 90 days rule. If you want to spend several months sampling French wine and culture, those 90 days for the rest of Schengen might be enough.

    • Come for 90 days, then travel to a Schengen country with pre-Schengen bilateral agreements with the US (e.g. Poland) or a non-Schengen country.





    share|improve this answer























    • This is fine, indeed, the "D" category is what the OP needs, but as a couple they need two of them, and the premise for that is going to be hard to come up with.

      – Gayot Fow
      May 9 '16 at 5:55


















    7














    I'll give you some of my personal experience as a white American citizen living in France on a long-stay working Visa. Standard disclaimers apply, and this isn't legal advice.



    Firstly, I wouldn't worry too much about border checks coming into France, and not at all while traveling in the Schengen area after you have already entered the country. Border checks are largely perfunctory, they ask minimal questions, and it is very common to come in on a one-way ticket. To my knowledge, there is no requirement to have concrete plans to return home, nor to have accommodations booked for the duration of your trip, if you are coming in as a tourist (i.e., no visa). Once you are in, you will be able to freely travel within the Schengen area. If controlled, you simply need to show your passport and entry stamp. Note that, while my experience has been entirely smooth, if you have darker skin or an Arabic sounding name, you may face additional scrutiny (just yesterday I walked past a group of French cops in a train station with a giant backpack on. They proceeded to search the pockets of the black guy who was walking--without luggage--directly behind me). That shouldn't scare you off, as you still should not be denied entry just for having a one-way ticket, but do make sure all your ducks are in a row.



    If you want to stay in the Schengen zone for longer than 3 months, you can apply for a long-stay visa in the United States before you leave. For a visitor visa, they are good for a year, can be renewed, and you simply will need to show the ability to support yourself financially for the duration of the trip. There are no hard and fast guidelines, but I think around €1500 per person per month is usually acceptable. Note that operating your business by phone during the trip almost certainly counts as working, and thus is illegal on this type of visa. It also will not help in terms of proving financial support. There are likely visas available to individuals who want to independently operate a business while in France. If you want to go that route, I would check the expat site, an attorney, and the local French consulate.



    For renting an apartment, you will have no issues. 1-2 months is a bit short, so you will probably have to find a place specialising in short-term rentals, but otherwise you should be fine. Many cities have aparthotels for just this purpose. When I arrived, I stayed 2 months in an aparthotel with a full kitchen for not much more than a regular rental. I was even able to bring my dog. France also has quite a few rentals available on sites like Air B&B. A regular apartment rental (generally 3 years in France, with the option to leave with 3-months notice) will be harder; you may need a French cell phone, bank account, and a guarantor to make that happen.






    share|improve this answer





























      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes








      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      16














      There's several approaches you can take. They all involve some planning, and there are some extra marks of caution.



      • Mix Schengen and non-schengen stays. The actual Schengen rules say for any given day in the Schengen area, you must have spent less than 90 out of the 180 preceeding days in the Schengen area. The EU even provides a calculator to help with this. So, you can make journeys to other places a US citizen can visit in between Schengen stays. The UK and Ireland are popular with Americans. The former Yugoslav states and Bulgaria and Romanina are usually quite accepting also. I think the visa-free stays are shorter, but you can also go to North Africa (although there are security concerns in some parts of some of these destinations).


      • Take advantage of pre-Schengen bilateral agreements between the US and European nations. These can be used to extend your stay in that country beyond the 90 days. Note that you cannot use these as part of a "swap" Stratergy as you could with visits to the UK, as you remain within Schengen, thus accumulating days against the 90/180 counter making it illegal for you to go back to non-bilateral Schengen nations, even while your stay remains legal.


      • Investigate if you have any claims to EU citizenship. The rules vary from EU nation to EU nation, but if either of you have say, grandparents from an EU nation, you may be able to claim citizenship there. This would allow you to stay in the EU indefintley (provided you could support yourself), and make remaining in non-EU Schengen states easier. It would also remove the issue (discussed further below) that you would not be able to (legally) operate your business while in Europe (well, for EU members. You may still have to stop working when in Switzerland/Norway).

      • Look in to a variety of long-stay "D" type Schengen visas. These allow you to stay for the duration in the country that awards them (different countries have different rules), and only apply the 90-in-180 for journeys to other parts of the Schengen zone.

      • Look in to actually emigrating, as that seems more like what you want to do. (Certainly your language is suggesting that). If you are fairly wealthy, this is often not too difficult (depending on just how wealthy, you might even be able to "buy" your way to citizenship with a large enough investment.). If you can get a residence permit, then things look similar to how they do on the long-stay visas mentioned above.

      Important Note



      As has been mentioned above in this answer, and in other answers, you need to be careful that you are funding this visit through savings from your remote business, and not continuing to run it. Exactly how much trouble you get in to depends on if you are caught, and which country/border agent by, but note that working (including remote working), is no permitted by the visa-free entry that US citizens receive to the Schengen area, nor to several neighbouring states. See this question about a couple who tried to run their remote business in the UK (non Schengen, but operates similar rules, although the UK does seem especially strict on the working restrictions).






      share|improve this answer





























        16














        There's several approaches you can take. They all involve some planning, and there are some extra marks of caution.



        • Mix Schengen and non-schengen stays. The actual Schengen rules say for any given day in the Schengen area, you must have spent less than 90 out of the 180 preceeding days in the Schengen area. The EU even provides a calculator to help with this. So, you can make journeys to other places a US citizen can visit in between Schengen stays. The UK and Ireland are popular with Americans. The former Yugoslav states and Bulgaria and Romanina are usually quite accepting also. I think the visa-free stays are shorter, but you can also go to North Africa (although there are security concerns in some parts of some of these destinations).


        • Take advantage of pre-Schengen bilateral agreements between the US and European nations. These can be used to extend your stay in that country beyond the 90 days. Note that you cannot use these as part of a "swap" Stratergy as you could with visits to the UK, as you remain within Schengen, thus accumulating days against the 90/180 counter making it illegal for you to go back to non-bilateral Schengen nations, even while your stay remains legal.


        • Investigate if you have any claims to EU citizenship. The rules vary from EU nation to EU nation, but if either of you have say, grandparents from an EU nation, you may be able to claim citizenship there. This would allow you to stay in the EU indefintley (provided you could support yourself), and make remaining in non-EU Schengen states easier. It would also remove the issue (discussed further below) that you would not be able to (legally) operate your business while in Europe (well, for EU members. You may still have to stop working when in Switzerland/Norway).

        • Look in to a variety of long-stay "D" type Schengen visas. These allow you to stay for the duration in the country that awards them (different countries have different rules), and only apply the 90-in-180 for journeys to other parts of the Schengen zone.

        • Look in to actually emigrating, as that seems more like what you want to do. (Certainly your language is suggesting that). If you are fairly wealthy, this is often not too difficult (depending on just how wealthy, you might even be able to "buy" your way to citizenship with a large enough investment.). If you can get a residence permit, then things look similar to how they do on the long-stay visas mentioned above.

        Important Note



        As has been mentioned above in this answer, and in other answers, you need to be careful that you are funding this visit through savings from your remote business, and not continuing to run it. Exactly how much trouble you get in to depends on if you are caught, and which country/border agent by, but note that working (including remote working), is no permitted by the visa-free entry that US citizens receive to the Schengen area, nor to several neighbouring states. See this question about a couple who tried to run their remote business in the UK (non Schengen, but operates similar rules, although the UK does seem especially strict on the working restrictions).






        share|improve this answer



























          16












          16








          16







          There's several approaches you can take. They all involve some planning, and there are some extra marks of caution.



          • Mix Schengen and non-schengen stays. The actual Schengen rules say for any given day in the Schengen area, you must have spent less than 90 out of the 180 preceeding days in the Schengen area. The EU even provides a calculator to help with this. So, you can make journeys to other places a US citizen can visit in between Schengen stays. The UK and Ireland are popular with Americans. The former Yugoslav states and Bulgaria and Romanina are usually quite accepting also. I think the visa-free stays are shorter, but you can also go to North Africa (although there are security concerns in some parts of some of these destinations).


          • Take advantage of pre-Schengen bilateral agreements between the US and European nations. These can be used to extend your stay in that country beyond the 90 days. Note that you cannot use these as part of a "swap" Stratergy as you could with visits to the UK, as you remain within Schengen, thus accumulating days against the 90/180 counter making it illegal for you to go back to non-bilateral Schengen nations, even while your stay remains legal.


          • Investigate if you have any claims to EU citizenship. The rules vary from EU nation to EU nation, but if either of you have say, grandparents from an EU nation, you may be able to claim citizenship there. This would allow you to stay in the EU indefintley (provided you could support yourself), and make remaining in non-EU Schengen states easier. It would also remove the issue (discussed further below) that you would not be able to (legally) operate your business while in Europe (well, for EU members. You may still have to stop working when in Switzerland/Norway).

          • Look in to a variety of long-stay "D" type Schengen visas. These allow you to stay for the duration in the country that awards them (different countries have different rules), and only apply the 90-in-180 for journeys to other parts of the Schengen zone.

          • Look in to actually emigrating, as that seems more like what you want to do. (Certainly your language is suggesting that). If you are fairly wealthy, this is often not too difficult (depending on just how wealthy, you might even be able to "buy" your way to citizenship with a large enough investment.). If you can get a residence permit, then things look similar to how they do on the long-stay visas mentioned above.

          Important Note



          As has been mentioned above in this answer, and in other answers, you need to be careful that you are funding this visit through savings from your remote business, and not continuing to run it. Exactly how much trouble you get in to depends on if you are caught, and which country/border agent by, but note that working (including remote working), is no permitted by the visa-free entry that US citizens receive to the Schengen area, nor to several neighbouring states. See this question about a couple who tried to run their remote business in the UK (non Schengen, but operates similar rules, although the UK does seem especially strict on the working restrictions).






          share|improve this answer















          There's several approaches you can take. They all involve some planning, and there are some extra marks of caution.



          • Mix Schengen and non-schengen stays. The actual Schengen rules say for any given day in the Schengen area, you must have spent less than 90 out of the 180 preceeding days in the Schengen area. The EU even provides a calculator to help with this. So, you can make journeys to other places a US citizen can visit in between Schengen stays. The UK and Ireland are popular with Americans. The former Yugoslav states and Bulgaria and Romanina are usually quite accepting also. I think the visa-free stays are shorter, but you can also go to North Africa (although there are security concerns in some parts of some of these destinations).


          • Take advantage of pre-Schengen bilateral agreements between the US and European nations. These can be used to extend your stay in that country beyond the 90 days. Note that you cannot use these as part of a "swap" Stratergy as you could with visits to the UK, as you remain within Schengen, thus accumulating days against the 90/180 counter making it illegal for you to go back to non-bilateral Schengen nations, even while your stay remains legal.


          • Investigate if you have any claims to EU citizenship. The rules vary from EU nation to EU nation, but if either of you have say, grandparents from an EU nation, you may be able to claim citizenship there. This would allow you to stay in the EU indefintley (provided you could support yourself), and make remaining in non-EU Schengen states easier. It would also remove the issue (discussed further below) that you would not be able to (legally) operate your business while in Europe (well, for EU members. You may still have to stop working when in Switzerland/Norway).

          • Look in to a variety of long-stay "D" type Schengen visas. These allow you to stay for the duration in the country that awards them (different countries have different rules), and only apply the 90-in-180 for journeys to other parts of the Schengen zone.

          • Look in to actually emigrating, as that seems more like what you want to do. (Certainly your language is suggesting that). If you are fairly wealthy, this is often not too difficult (depending on just how wealthy, you might even be able to "buy" your way to citizenship with a large enough investment.). If you can get a residence permit, then things look similar to how they do on the long-stay visas mentioned above.

          Important Note



          As has been mentioned above in this answer, and in other answers, you need to be careful that you are funding this visit through savings from your remote business, and not continuing to run it. Exactly how much trouble you get in to depends on if you are caught, and which country/border agent by, but note that working (including remote working), is no permitted by the visa-free entry that US citizens receive to the Schengen area, nor to several neighbouring states. See this question about a couple who tried to run their remote business in the UK (non Schengen, but operates similar rules, although the UK does seem especially strict on the working restrictions).







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:52









          Community

          1




          1










          answered May 9 '16 at 9:58









          CMasterCMaster

          10.7k44792




          10.7k44792























              10














              If you plan to "operate" your business over the phone, you might actually be working in Europe. That's not what a tourist does. There could be tax consequences, both home and abroad.



              If you can refrain from working on your business on your holiday, options might be:



              • Apply for D visa for France or Italy, then only time in other countries counts against the 90 days rule. If you want to spend several months sampling French wine and culture, those 90 days for the rest of Schengen might be enough.

              • Come for 90 days, then travel to a Schengen country with pre-Schengen bilateral agreements with the US (e.g. Poland) or a non-Schengen country.





              share|improve this answer























              • This is fine, indeed, the "D" category is what the OP needs, but as a couple they need two of them, and the premise for that is going to be hard to come up with.

                – Gayot Fow
                May 9 '16 at 5:55















              10














              If you plan to "operate" your business over the phone, you might actually be working in Europe. That's not what a tourist does. There could be tax consequences, both home and abroad.



              If you can refrain from working on your business on your holiday, options might be:



              • Apply for D visa for France or Italy, then only time in other countries counts against the 90 days rule. If you want to spend several months sampling French wine and culture, those 90 days for the rest of Schengen might be enough.

              • Come for 90 days, then travel to a Schengen country with pre-Schengen bilateral agreements with the US (e.g. Poland) or a non-Schengen country.





              share|improve this answer























              • This is fine, indeed, the "D" category is what the OP needs, but as a couple they need two of them, and the premise for that is going to be hard to come up with.

                – Gayot Fow
                May 9 '16 at 5:55













              10












              10








              10







              If you plan to "operate" your business over the phone, you might actually be working in Europe. That's not what a tourist does. There could be tax consequences, both home and abroad.



              If you can refrain from working on your business on your holiday, options might be:



              • Apply for D visa for France or Italy, then only time in other countries counts against the 90 days rule. If you want to spend several months sampling French wine and culture, those 90 days for the rest of Schengen might be enough.

              • Come for 90 days, then travel to a Schengen country with pre-Schengen bilateral agreements with the US (e.g. Poland) or a non-Schengen country.





              share|improve this answer













              If you plan to "operate" your business over the phone, you might actually be working in Europe. That's not what a tourist does. There could be tax consequences, both home and abroad.



              If you can refrain from working on your business on your holiday, options might be:



              • Apply for D visa for France or Italy, then only time in other countries counts against the 90 days rule. If you want to spend several months sampling French wine and culture, those 90 days for the rest of Schengen might be enough.

              • Come for 90 days, then travel to a Schengen country with pre-Schengen bilateral agreements with the US (e.g. Poland) or a non-Schengen country.






              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered May 9 '16 at 5:27









              o.m.o.m.

              23.8k23560




              23.8k23560












              • This is fine, indeed, the "D" category is what the OP needs, but as a couple they need two of them, and the premise for that is going to be hard to come up with.

                – Gayot Fow
                May 9 '16 at 5:55

















              • This is fine, indeed, the "D" category is what the OP needs, but as a couple they need two of them, and the premise for that is going to be hard to come up with.

                – Gayot Fow
                May 9 '16 at 5:55
















              This is fine, indeed, the "D" category is what the OP needs, but as a couple they need two of them, and the premise for that is going to be hard to come up with.

              – Gayot Fow
              May 9 '16 at 5:55





              This is fine, indeed, the "D" category is what the OP needs, but as a couple they need two of them, and the premise for that is going to be hard to come up with.

              – Gayot Fow
              May 9 '16 at 5:55











              7














              I'll give you some of my personal experience as a white American citizen living in France on a long-stay working Visa. Standard disclaimers apply, and this isn't legal advice.



              Firstly, I wouldn't worry too much about border checks coming into France, and not at all while traveling in the Schengen area after you have already entered the country. Border checks are largely perfunctory, they ask minimal questions, and it is very common to come in on a one-way ticket. To my knowledge, there is no requirement to have concrete plans to return home, nor to have accommodations booked for the duration of your trip, if you are coming in as a tourist (i.e., no visa). Once you are in, you will be able to freely travel within the Schengen area. If controlled, you simply need to show your passport and entry stamp. Note that, while my experience has been entirely smooth, if you have darker skin or an Arabic sounding name, you may face additional scrutiny (just yesterday I walked past a group of French cops in a train station with a giant backpack on. They proceeded to search the pockets of the black guy who was walking--without luggage--directly behind me). That shouldn't scare you off, as you still should not be denied entry just for having a one-way ticket, but do make sure all your ducks are in a row.



              If you want to stay in the Schengen zone for longer than 3 months, you can apply for a long-stay visa in the United States before you leave. For a visitor visa, they are good for a year, can be renewed, and you simply will need to show the ability to support yourself financially for the duration of the trip. There are no hard and fast guidelines, but I think around €1500 per person per month is usually acceptable. Note that operating your business by phone during the trip almost certainly counts as working, and thus is illegal on this type of visa. It also will not help in terms of proving financial support. There are likely visas available to individuals who want to independently operate a business while in France. If you want to go that route, I would check the expat site, an attorney, and the local French consulate.



              For renting an apartment, you will have no issues. 1-2 months is a bit short, so you will probably have to find a place specialising in short-term rentals, but otherwise you should be fine. Many cities have aparthotels for just this purpose. When I arrived, I stayed 2 months in an aparthotel with a full kitchen for not much more than a regular rental. I was even able to bring my dog. France also has quite a few rentals available on sites like Air B&B. A regular apartment rental (generally 3 years in France, with the option to leave with 3-months notice) will be harder; you may need a French cell phone, bank account, and a guarantor to make that happen.






              share|improve this answer



























                7














                I'll give you some of my personal experience as a white American citizen living in France on a long-stay working Visa. Standard disclaimers apply, and this isn't legal advice.



                Firstly, I wouldn't worry too much about border checks coming into France, and not at all while traveling in the Schengen area after you have already entered the country. Border checks are largely perfunctory, they ask minimal questions, and it is very common to come in on a one-way ticket. To my knowledge, there is no requirement to have concrete plans to return home, nor to have accommodations booked for the duration of your trip, if you are coming in as a tourist (i.e., no visa). Once you are in, you will be able to freely travel within the Schengen area. If controlled, you simply need to show your passport and entry stamp. Note that, while my experience has been entirely smooth, if you have darker skin or an Arabic sounding name, you may face additional scrutiny (just yesterday I walked past a group of French cops in a train station with a giant backpack on. They proceeded to search the pockets of the black guy who was walking--without luggage--directly behind me). That shouldn't scare you off, as you still should not be denied entry just for having a one-way ticket, but do make sure all your ducks are in a row.



                If you want to stay in the Schengen zone for longer than 3 months, you can apply for a long-stay visa in the United States before you leave. For a visitor visa, they are good for a year, can be renewed, and you simply will need to show the ability to support yourself financially for the duration of the trip. There are no hard and fast guidelines, but I think around €1500 per person per month is usually acceptable. Note that operating your business by phone during the trip almost certainly counts as working, and thus is illegal on this type of visa. It also will not help in terms of proving financial support. There are likely visas available to individuals who want to independently operate a business while in France. If you want to go that route, I would check the expat site, an attorney, and the local French consulate.



                For renting an apartment, you will have no issues. 1-2 months is a bit short, so you will probably have to find a place specialising in short-term rentals, but otherwise you should be fine. Many cities have aparthotels for just this purpose. When I arrived, I stayed 2 months in an aparthotel with a full kitchen for not much more than a regular rental. I was even able to bring my dog. France also has quite a few rentals available on sites like Air B&B. A regular apartment rental (generally 3 years in France, with the option to leave with 3-months notice) will be harder; you may need a French cell phone, bank account, and a guarantor to make that happen.






                share|improve this answer

























                  7












                  7








                  7







                  I'll give you some of my personal experience as a white American citizen living in France on a long-stay working Visa. Standard disclaimers apply, and this isn't legal advice.



                  Firstly, I wouldn't worry too much about border checks coming into France, and not at all while traveling in the Schengen area after you have already entered the country. Border checks are largely perfunctory, they ask minimal questions, and it is very common to come in on a one-way ticket. To my knowledge, there is no requirement to have concrete plans to return home, nor to have accommodations booked for the duration of your trip, if you are coming in as a tourist (i.e., no visa). Once you are in, you will be able to freely travel within the Schengen area. If controlled, you simply need to show your passport and entry stamp. Note that, while my experience has been entirely smooth, if you have darker skin or an Arabic sounding name, you may face additional scrutiny (just yesterday I walked past a group of French cops in a train station with a giant backpack on. They proceeded to search the pockets of the black guy who was walking--without luggage--directly behind me). That shouldn't scare you off, as you still should not be denied entry just for having a one-way ticket, but do make sure all your ducks are in a row.



                  If you want to stay in the Schengen zone for longer than 3 months, you can apply for a long-stay visa in the United States before you leave. For a visitor visa, they are good for a year, can be renewed, and you simply will need to show the ability to support yourself financially for the duration of the trip. There are no hard and fast guidelines, but I think around €1500 per person per month is usually acceptable. Note that operating your business by phone during the trip almost certainly counts as working, and thus is illegal on this type of visa. It also will not help in terms of proving financial support. There are likely visas available to individuals who want to independently operate a business while in France. If you want to go that route, I would check the expat site, an attorney, and the local French consulate.



                  For renting an apartment, you will have no issues. 1-2 months is a bit short, so you will probably have to find a place specialising in short-term rentals, but otherwise you should be fine. Many cities have aparthotels for just this purpose. When I arrived, I stayed 2 months in an aparthotel with a full kitchen for not much more than a regular rental. I was even able to bring my dog. France also has quite a few rentals available on sites like Air B&B. A regular apartment rental (generally 3 years in France, with the option to leave with 3-months notice) will be harder; you may need a French cell phone, bank account, and a guarantor to make that happen.






                  share|improve this answer













                  I'll give you some of my personal experience as a white American citizen living in France on a long-stay working Visa. Standard disclaimers apply, and this isn't legal advice.



                  Firstly, I wouldn't worry too much about border checks coming into France, and not at all while traveling in the Schengen area after you have already entered the country. Border checks are largely perfunctory, they ask minimal questions, and it is very common to come in on a one-way ticket. To my knowledge, there is no requirement to have concrete plans to return home, nor to have accommodations booked for the duration of your trip, if you are coming in as a tourist (i.e., no visa). Once you are in, you will be able to freely travel within the Schengen area. If controlled, you simply need to show your passport and entry stamp. Note that, while my experience has been entirely smooth, if you have darker skin or an Arabic sounding name, you may face additional scrutiny (just yesterday I walked past a group of French cops in a train station with a giant backpack on. They proceeded to search the pockets of the black guy who was walking--without luggage--directly behind me). That shouldn't scare you off, as you still should not be denied entry just for having a one-way ticket, but do make sure all your ducks are in a row.



                  If you want to stay in the Schengen zone for longer than 3 months, you can apply for a long-stay visa in the United States before you leave. For a visitor visa, they are good for a year, can be renewed, and you simply will need to show the ability to support yourself financially for the duration of the trip. There are no hard and fast guidelines, but I think around €1500 per person per month is usually acceptable. Note that operating your business by phone during the trip almost certainly counts as working, and thus is illegal on this type of visa. It also will not help in terms of proving financial support. There are likely visas available to individuals who want to independently operate a business while in France. If you want to go that route, I would check the expat site, an attorney, and the local French consulate.



                  For renting an apartment, you will have no issues. 1-2 months is a bit short, so you will probably have to find a place specialising in short-term rentals, but otherwise you should be fine. Many cities have aparthotels for just this purpose. When I arrived, I stayed 2 months in an aparthotel with a full kitchen for not much more than a regular rental. I was even able to bring my dog. France also has quite a few rentals available on sites like Air B&B. A regular apartment rental (generally 3 years in France, with the option to leave with 3-months notice) will be harder; you may need a French cell phone, bank account, and a guarantor to make that happen.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered May 9 '16 at 9:17









                  z_doodz_dood

                  1892




                  1892













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