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Track your days in the Schengen Area against the 90-in-180 rule — the right way, with a true rolling 180-day window (not fixed calendar quarters, which is how most calculators get it wrong). See days used and remaining today, find out how long you can stay from a given date, and check whether a planned trip will breach the limit.
Quick answer
The Schengen 90/180 rule lets a visa-exempt traveller stay at most 90 days within any rolling 180-day period. The key word is rolling: on every single day, you look back 180 days and count days present — that running total must stay at or below 90. Both your entry day and your exit day count. The WhereNext calculator computes this exactly (timezone-safe integer date math), shows your days used and remaining today, tells you the maximum consecutive stay possible from any arrival date, and flags the exact day a planned trip would push you over the limit.
Key facts
Add every entry/exit in the Schengen Area. Both the day you enter and the day you leave count as days present.
Add at least one valid trip to see your status.
The EU's Entry/Exit System (EES) is operational — entries and exits are recorded biometrically at the border, so the 90/180 count is no longer estimated from passport stamps. ETIAS pre-authorisation follows later in 2026. If you hold a Schengen-country Digital Nomad Visa or residence permit, days spent in thatcountry don't count against your 90/180 allowance — but time in other Schengen countries still does, so two counters run in parallel.
This is a planning aid, not legal advice. Confirm your status with official border authorities before you travel.
Hitting the 90-day wall?
If you want to stay longer, a Digital Nomad Visa or residence permit resets the math. Start a free case to find the right pathway for your destination and income.