New passport and entrance Schengen










4















I am from Brazil and travel a lot in Schengen countries. Under the rules of Schengen visa (3 months stay in a 6 months period). In my passport are the entrance and exit stamps, also to chec the days I stay in Schengen.
I need a new passport and will get this in Brazil. So in this new passport are NOT the stamps. Does this mean I start new with the Schengen visa rule? I seems like. The new passport is empty. Or do I miss something? It would be great because I am almost on my 90 days stay in the period of 180 days.










share|improve this question



















  • 1





    @J.Constantine Actually that's not true generally... but is completely unrelated to whether you are allowed to do it or not. It's just that enforcement is more complicated.

    – Relaxed
    Apr 19 '16 at 8:15











  • @Relaxed Fair enough. Still, I'd say don't do it

    – Belle-Sophie
    Apr 19 '16 at 11:30






  • 1





    @J.Constantine Indeed, I completely agree with that. And to be perfectly accurate, some entries are registered (typically in national systems that are not interconnected - yet!) so there is always a chance that you would get caught. And there will probably be a more comprehensive system at some point in the future.

    – Relaxed
    Apr 19 '16 at 12:50











  • @Relaxed thanks for the clarification! Learned something new today.

    – Belle-Sophie
    Apr 19 '16 at 13:40















4















I am from Brazil and travel a lot in Schengen countries. Under the rules of Schengen visa (3 months stay in a 6 months period). In my passport are the entrance and exit stamps, also to chec the days I stay in Schengen.
I need a new passport and will get this in Brazil. So in this new passport are NOT the stamps. Does this mean I start new with the Schengen visa rule? I seems like. The new passport is empty. Or do I miss something? It would be great because I am almost on my 90 days stay in the period of 180 days.










share|improve this question



















  • 1





    @J.Constantine Actually that's not true generally... but is completely unrelated to whether you are allowed to do it or not. It's just that enforcement is more complicated.

    – Relaxed
    Apr 19 '16 at 8:15











  • @Relaxed Fair enough. Still, I'd say don't do it

    – Belle-Sophie
    Apr 19 '16 at 11:30






  • 1





    @J.Constantine Indeed, I completely agree with that. And to be perfectly accurate, some entries are registered (typically in national systems that are not interconnected - yet!) so there is always a chance that you would get caught. And there will probably be a more comprehensive system at some point in the future.

    – Relaxed
    Apr 19 '16 at 12:50











  • @Relaxed thanks for the clarification! Learned something new today.

    – Belle-Sophie
    Apr 19 '16 at 13:40













4












4








4








I am from Brazil and travel a lot in Schengen countries. Under the rules of Schengen visa (3 months stay in a 6 months period). In my passport are the entrance and exit stamps, also to chec the days I stay in Schengen.
I need a new passport and will get this in Brazil. So in this new passport are NOT the stamps. Does this mean I start new with the Schengen visa rule? I seems like. The new passport is empty. Or do I miss something? It would be great because I am almost on my 90 days stay in the period of 180 days.










share|improve this question
















I am from Brazil and travel a lot in Schengen countries. Under the rules of Schengen visa (3 months stay in a 6 months period). In my passport are the entrance and exit stamps, also to chec the days I stay in Schengen.
I need a new passport and will get this in Brazil. So in this new passport are NOT the stamps. Does this mean I start new with the Schengen visa rule? I seems like. The new passport is empty. Or do I miss something? It would be great because I am almost on my 90 days stay in the period of 180 days.







passports passport-stamps






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Apr 19 '16 at 8:16









Relaxed

77k10156292




77k10156292










asked Apr 19 '16 at 4:15









ManyuManyu

212




212







  • 1





    @J.Constantine Actually that's not true generally... but is completely unrelated to whether you are allowed to do it or not. It's just that enforcement is more complicated.

    – Relaxed
    Apr 19 '16 at 8:15











  • @Relaxed Fair enough. Still, I'd say don't do it

    – Belle-Sophie
    Apr 19 '16 at 11:30






  • 1





    @J.Constantine Indeed, I completely agree with that. And to be perfectly accurate, some entries are registered (typically in national systems that are not interconnected - yet!) so there is always a chance that you would get caught. And there will probably be a more comprehensive system at some point in the future.

    – Relaxed
    Apr 19 '16 at 12:50











  • @Relaxed thanks for the clarification! Learned something new today.

    – Belle-Sophie
    Apr 19 '16 at 13:40












  • 1





    @J.Constantine Actually that's not true generally... but is completely unrelated to whether you are allowed to do it or not. It's just that enforcement is more complicated.

    – Relaxed
    Apr 19 '16 at 8:15











  • @Relaxed Fair enough. Still, I'd say don't do it

    – Belle-Sophie
    Apr 19 '16 at 11:30






  • 1





    @J.Constantine Indeed, I completely agree with that. And to be perfectly accurate, some entries are registered (typically in national systems that are not interconnected - yet!) so there is always a chance that you would get caught. And there will probably be a more comprehensive system at some point in the future.

    – Relaxed
    Apr 19 '16 at 12:50











  • @Relaxed thanks for the clarification! Learned something new today.

    – Belle-Sophie
    Apr 19 '16 at 13:40







1




1





@J.Constantine Actually that's not true generally... but is completely unrelated to whether you are allowed to do it or not. It's just that enforcement is more complicated.

– Relaxed
Apr 19 '16 at 8:15





@J.Constantine Actually that's not true generally... but is completely unrelated to whether you are allowed to do it or not. It's just that enforcement is more complicated.

– Relaxed
Apr 19 '16 at 8:15













@Relaxed Fair enough. Still, I'd say don't do it

– Belle-Sophie
Apr 19 '16 at 11:30





@Relaxed Fair enough. Still, I'd say don't do it

– Belle-Sophie
Apr 19 '16 at 11:30




1




1





@J.Constantine Indeed, I completely agree with that. And to be perfectly accurate, some entries are registered (typically in national systems that are not interconnected - yet!) so there is always a chance that you would get caught. And there will probably be a more comprehensive system at some point in the future.

– Relaxed
Apr 19 '16 at 12:50





@J.Constantine Indeed, I completely agree with that. And to be perfectly accurate, some entries are registered (typically in national systems that are not interconnected - yet!) so there is always a chance that you would get caught. And there will probably be a more comprehensive system at some point in the future.

– Relaxed
Apr 19 '16 at 12:50













@Relaxed thanks for the clarification! Learned something new today.

– Belle-Sophie
Apr 19 '16 at 13:40





@Relaxed thanks for the clarification! Learned something new today.

– Belle-Sophie
Apr 19 '16 at 13:40










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















11














No. The rules apply to you as an individual person, not to a specific passport. No matter how many passports you have, you, the unique human being, get 90 out of 180 days (otherwise a lot of people would be conveniently losing their passport regularly).






share|improve this answer


















  • 1





    ... and dual nationals would be able to stay indefinitely by doing a visa run and switching passports every 90 days (+1).

    – Relaxed
    Apr 19 '16 at 12:51











  • Also they have finger-prints of visa holder, which, unfortunately does not change witg change of passport :)

    – DavChana
    Apr 19 '16 at 15:30











  • @DavChana What visa holder? Brazilians are non-visa nationals

    – Crazydre
    Sep 24 '17 at 20:58











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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









11














No. The rules apply to you as an individual person, not to a specific passport. No matter how many passports you have, you, the unique human being, get 90 out of 180 days (otherwise a lot of people would be conveniently losing their passport regularly).






share|improve this answer


















  • 1





    ... and dual nationals would be able to stay indefinitely by doing a visa run and switching passports every 90 days (+1).

    – Relaxed
    Apr 19 '16 at 12:51











  • Also they have finger-prints of visa holder, which, unfortunately does not change witg change of passport :)

    – DavChana
    Apr 19 '16 at 15:30











  • @DavChana What visa holder? Brazilians are non-visa nationals

    – Crazydre
    Sep 24 '17 at 20:58















11














No. The rules apply to you as an individual person, not to a specific passport. No matter how many passports you have, you, the unique human being, get 90 out of 180 days (otherwise a lot of people would be conveniently losing their passport regularly).






share|improve this answer


















  • 1





    ... and dual nationals would be able to stay indefinitely by doing a visa run and switching passports every 90 days (+1).

    – Relaxed
    Apr 19 '16 at 12:51











  • Also they have finger-prints of visa holder, which, unfortunately does not change witg change of passport :)

    – DavChana
    Apr 19 '16 at 15:30











  • @DavChana What visa holder? Brazilians are non-visa nationals

    – Crazydre
    Sep 24 '17 at 20:58













11












11








11







No. The rules apply to you as an individual person, not to a specific passport. No matter how many passports you have, you, the unique human being, get 90 out of 180 days (otherwise a lot of people would be conveniently losing their passport regularly).






share|improve this answer













No. The rules apply to you as an individual person, not to a specific passport. No matter how many passports you have, you, the unique human being, get 90 out of 180 days (otherwise a lot of people would be conveniently losing their passport regularly).







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Apr 19 '16 at 4:33









Zach LiptonZach Lipton

61.9k11188250




61.9k11188250







  • 1





    ... and dual nationals would be able to stay indefinitely by doing a visa run and switching passports every 90 days (+1).

    – Relaxed
    Apr 19 '16 at 12:51











  • Also they have finger-prints of visa holder, which, unfortunately does not change witg change of passport :)

    – DavChana
    Apr 19 '16 at 15:30











  • @DavChana What visa holder? Brazilians are non-visa nationals

    – Crazydre
    Sep 24 '17 at 20:58












  • 1





    ... and dual nationals would be able to stay indefinitely by doing a visa run and switching passports every 90 days (+1).

    – Relaxed
    Apr 19 '16 at 12:51











  • Also they have finger-prints of visa holder, which, unfortunately does not change witg change of passport :)

    – DavChana
    Apr 19 '16 at 15:30











  • @DavChana What visa holder? Brazilians are non-visa nationals

    – Crazydre
    Sep 24 '17 at 20:58







1




1





... and dual nationals would be able to stay indefinitely by doing a visa run and switching passports every 90 days (+1).

– Relaxed
Apr 19 '16 at 12:51





... and dual nationals would be able to stay indefinitely by doing a visa run and switching passports every 90 days (+1).

– Relaxed
Apr 19 '16 at 12:51













Also they have finger-prints of visa holder, which, unfortunately does not change witg change of passport :)

– DavChana
Apr 19 '16 at 15:30





Also they have finger-prints of visa holder, which, unfortunately does not change witg change of passport :)

– DavChana
Apr 19 '16 at 15:30













@DavChana What visa holder? Brazilians are non-visa nationals

– Crazydre
Sep 24 '17 at 20:58





@DavChana What visa holder? Brazilians are non-visa nationals

– Crazydre
Sep 24 '17 at 20:58

















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