---
title: "Schengen Area 2026: country list, 90-day rules and pitfalls for US travelers"
excerpt: "The Schengen Area in 2026 includes 29 countries: Germany, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Denmark, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Estonia, Finland, France, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Norway, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Czech Republic, Romania, Sweden and Switzerland. US passport holders enter visa-free and may stay up to 90 days within a rolling 180-day window, counting time across all 29 countries combined. ETIAS takes effect in Q4 2026 with full enforcement projected for April 2027. A one-day overstay can trigger fines, deportation and a SIS ban."
description: "The Schengen Area in 2026 includes 29 countries: Germany, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Denmark, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Estonia, Finland, France, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Norway, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Czech Republic, Romania, Sweden and Switzerland. US passport holders enter visa-free and may stay up to 90 days within a rolling 180-day window, counting time across all 29 countries combined. ETIAS takes effect in Q4 2026 with full enforcement projected for April 2027. A one-day overstay can trigger fines, deportation and a SIS ban."
slug: "schengen-area-2026-paises-regras-brasileiros-90-dias"
locale: "en"
canonical: "https://voyspark.com/en/journal/schengen-area-2026-paises-regras-brasileiros-90-dias"
author: "Curadoria Voyspark"
published_at: "Sat May 23 2026 00:55:12 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)"
updated_at: "Wed Jun 03 2026 15:30:22 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)"
vertical: "culture"
reading_time_minutes: 22
word_count: 4247
hero_image: "https://s3.voyspark.com/voyspark-images/articles/schengen-area-2026-paises-regras-brasileiros-90-dias/hero-cfbe9a.jpg"
tags:
  - "schengen"
  - "visto"
  - "europa"
  - "guia"
  - "imigracao"
---

# Schengen Area 2026: country list, 90-day rules and pitfalls for US travelers

Schengen isn't the European Union. ETIAS isn't a visa. A national D residence visa isn't a Schengen visa. These three confusions account for 80% of American travelers turned away at the border.

The 90/180 rule doesn't count from January and doesn't reset when you change countries. It's a moving 180-day window counted backward from any given day. You can rack up days in Portugal, Germany and Croatia — they all go in the same bucket.

Below: the full list, the practical math of the rolling rule, the difference between the three blocs, what changes with ETIAS, and which documents to carry in your backpack when landing in Lisbon, Madrid or Paris.

---

### The 29 Schengen countries in 2026 (official list)

**TL;DR**: The Schengen Area in 2026 has 29 countries: 25 European Union members plus 4 associated states (Iceland, Norway, Switzerland, Liechtenstein). Croatia joined on 1 January 2023. Bulgaria and Romania joined by air and sea on 31 March 2024 and by land on 1 January 2025, completing full accession.

The official alphabetical list of 29 countries is: **Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden and Switzerland**.

Bulgaria and Romania had a phased entry. On 31 March 2024 border controls fell at ports and airports. On 1 January 2025 land controls fell, ending a 13-year negotiation. For Americans in 2026, this means flying between Bucharest and Vienna or taking the train from Sofia to Athens no longer involves a passport stamp.

| Country | Joined | EU bloc | Currency |
|---|---|---|---|
| Germany | 1995 | Yes | Euro |
| France | 1995 | Yes | Euro |
| Portugal | 1995 | Yes | Euro |
| Spain | 1995 | Yes | Euro |
| Italy | 1997 | Yes | Euro |
| Austria | 1997 | Yes | Euro |
| Greece | 2000 | Yes | Euro |
| Switzerland | 2008 | **No** | Swiss franc |
| Liechtenstein | 2011 | **No** | Swiss franc |
| Norway | 2001 | **No** | Norwegian krone |
| Iceland | 2001 | **No** | Icelandic krona |
| Croatia | 2023 | Yes | Euro (2023) |
| Bulgaria (air/sea) | 03/2024 | Yes | Lev |
| Bulgaria (land) | 01/2025 | Yes | Lev |
| Romania (air/sea) | 03/2024 | Yes | Leu |
| Romania (land) | 01/2025 | Yes | Leu |

Other EU members remain pending: **Cyprus** is still negotiating accession in 2026, and **Ireland** maintains its historic opt-out tied to the Common Travel Area with the UK.

---

### The difference between Schengen, the European Union and the Eurozone

**TL;DR**: Schengen is borderless travel without internal passport control (29 countries). The European Union is the political-economic bloc (27 member states). The Eurozone is the set of countries that adopted the euro as currency (20 countries). The three sets overlap but don't coincide — Switzerland is Schengen without EU, Ireland is EU without Schengen, Sweden is EU without the euro.

The three blocs solve different things. **Schengen** eliminates passport control between members. The **European Union** unifies economic, commercial and legislative regulation. The **Eurozone** unifies currency. A country can belong to one, two or all three.

Cases that confuse Americans:

- **Switzerland**: Schengen yes, EU no, euro no. You cross from Italy without showing your passport, but pay in Swiss francs.
- **Norway**: Schengen yes, EU no, euro no. Same as Switzerland, but with Norwegian krone.
- **Ireland**: EU yes, Schengen no, euro yes. The Lisbon-Dublin flight has passport control on arrival, even within the EU.
- **Cyprus**: EU yes, Schengen no (still in 2026), euro yes. Athens-Larnaca flight has a border.
- **Sweden**: EU yes, Schengen yes, euro **no** — you pay in Swedish krona.
- **Croatia**: EU yes (2013), Schengen yes (2023), euro yes (2023). Full trifecta.

The costliest confusion is thinking "EU" means "no border." It doesn't. The criterion for free movement is Schengen, and Schengen only.

---

### How the 90/180 rule works in practice

**TL;DR**: You can spend a maximum of 90 days within a rolling 180-day window across all 29 Schengen countries combined. The window moves with the calendar — on any given day, the count is how many of the previous 180 days were spent in Schengen. It doesn't reset on January 1st and doesn't reset when you change countries.

The rule is simple to state and counterintuitive to calculate. On any day border police examine your passport, they look back 180 days and tally how many were spent in any Schengen country. Over 90 is an overstay.

Numeric examples:

- Entered Lisbon March 1st, left May 29th (90 days). Can only return to Schengen starting **August 28th** — when the first days of the previous stay drop out of the rolling 180-day window.
- Spent 45 days in Italy in January-February, returned home, came back to Germany in May. Entitled to a maximum of **45 days** on this second trip before saturating the window.
- Lives in Lisbon on a D visa (residence) and travels to Paris for a weekend. **Schengen tourism days don't count** when you're a legal resident of a Schengen country — a D visa gives you a different status.

Entry day and exit day count as full days regardless of the time. Arriving in Madrid at 10 PM on the 10th and leaving 6 AM on the 11th burns **2 days** from your quota. The official EU calculator at [travel-europe.europa.eu/etias](https://travel-europe.europa.eu/etias) simulates any scenario.

| Scenario | Days used | Window balance |
|---|---|---|
| 90 straight days in Portugal | 90 | 0 — wait 90 days out |
| 30 days in Spain, 60 days later 30 days in Greece | 60 | 30 — can use |
| 89 days in Italy, then a 1-day layover in Frankfurt | 90 | 0 — layover counts |
| D visa Portugal + 1 weekend in Paris | 0 (tourism) | 90 (Schengen quota intact) |

---

### EU countries that aren't Schengen, and Schengen countries that aren't EU

**TL;DR**: In 2026, two EU members remain outside the Schengen Area (Ireland and Cyprus) and four Schengen countries remain outside the EU (Switzerland, Norway, Iceland, Liechtenstein). Flying between these blocs requires going through passport control, even without a visa. The confusion costs missed connections.

**EU but not Schengen** in 2026: **Ireland** and **Cyprus**. Ireland keeps its opt-out because of the Common Travel Area with the UK (historic open border with Belfast). Cyprus has stalled negotiations because of the Northern Cyprus issue, controlled by Turkey since 1974.

For Americans, this means flying Lisbon-Dublin has passport control on arrival and each entry is recorded independently. The 90 days in Ireland **don't combine** with the 90 days in Schengen — they're separate counts.

**Schengen but not EU** in 2026: **Switzerland**, **Norway**, **Iceland** and **Liechtenstein**. These 4 countries signed the Schengen Agreement without joining the European Union. You cross the border without control (or with symbolic control), but purchases pay different VAT and exchange is in local currency.

The UK left the EU in 2020 (Brexit) and was never in Schengen — flying to London requires a passport at the border and the new UK ETA (electronic travel authorization, £16) is required for Americans since 2025. It's separate from the European ETIAS.

---

### ETIAS 2026/2027 — what changes for Americans

**TL;DR**: ETIAS is an electronic travel authorization (not a visa) of €20, valid for 3 years, required for Americans entering Schengen. Takes effect in Q4 2026 with a 6-month transition period, becoming mandatory around April 2027. Approval in minutes for most, up to 30 days for cases under manual review.

ETIAS — European Travel Information and Authorization System — is the European equivalent of America's ESTA. It isn't a visa. It's a pre-screening that authorizes boarding to Schengen.

Confirmed features for 2026/2027:

- **Cost**: €20 per application (free for those under 18 and over 70).
- **Validity**: 3 years or until passport expiration (whichever comes first).
- **Application**: 100% online at the official EU site, no consulate visit.
- **Approval time**: minutes for 95% of cases; up to 4 days in standard review; up to 30 days in manual review.
- **Coverage**: valid for all 29 Schengen + Cyprus when it accedes.
- **Does not replace** the 90/180 rule — you remain limited to 90 days per window.

The official timeline puts entry into force in Q4 2026 with a 6-month transitional period (no fines), and full enforcement projected for April 2027. Airlines will check ETIAS before boarding, the way they check ESTA today. Watch out for fraudulent sites: the only legitimate application address is the official European Commission portal.

If you usually do back-to-back Europe trips (one in spring, another in fall) — the same ETIAS covers both. The 3-year validity is per passport: if your passport expires, the ETIAS expires.

---

### Documents border police can demand at arrival

**TL;DR**: Americans without a visa can be turned away if they don't present a passport valid 3+ months beyond return, return ticket, hotel reservation, €30,000 health insurance and proof of funds around €70 per day. Border police have discretionary power to deny entry even with a valid passport. Refusal rate hovers around 0.3% — low but real.

An American entering Schengen with passport only (no visa) should be prepared to show:

1. **Valid passport** at least 3 months beyond planned return date, with minimum 2 blank pages.
2. **Return ticket** or onward ticket to a destination outside Schengen, dated within 90 days.
3. **Accommodation reservation** (hotel, confirmed Airbnb, or host invitation letter with copy of host's ID).
4. **Travel health insurance** with minimum **€30,000** coverage valid across the entire Schengen area.
5. **Proof of funds** — varies by country, averaging **€70 per day** on card, cash or statement. Portugal asks €40/day + €75 entry; Spain asks €113.40/day; Italy requests similar amounts.
6. **Plausible itinerary** — coherent plan that explains the stay.

Refusal of entry is rare but happens. The most common causes in 2026: history of overstay on previous trips, suspicion of illegal immigration intent, contradictory documents (tourist visa declaring residential address of family member), and absence of insurance.

Border police don't need to justify. The traveler has the right to an interpreter and a written justification, but the decision is sovereign. Appeal is possible but rarely reverses the original entry refusal.

US healthcare won't help you in Europe. American insurance (including most platinum credit cards) rarely meets the €30,000 EU minimum requirement. Buy a dedicated travel policy through Allianz, World Nomads, IMG or SafetyWing — $40-80 per week of trip.

---

### Schengen visa vs national D (residence) visa — don't confuse them

**TL;DR**: A Schengen visa (C) is for tourism up to 90 days and Americans don't need one. A National D visa is for residence (study, work, retiree, digital nomad) of a specific country and requires a consulate application. Holders of a D visa don't count days under the 90/180 rule — they become legal residents, with the right to free tourism in the other 28 Schengen countries.

Two categories of visa that confuse Americans:

**Schengen visa type C** (uniform, short-term): issued by any Schengen consulate, valid for the entire zone, maximum 90 days per 180-day window. Americans **don't need** it for tourism. Required only in special cases (problematic passport, history of prior denial, certain diplomatic visas).

**National visa type D** (residence, long-term): issued by the consulate of **one specific country** (Portugal D7/D8 digital nomad, Spain non-lucrative, France passport talent, Germany freelancer, etc). Valid only for entry into the issuing country. After arrival and obtaining the residence permit (TR Portuguese, NIE Spanish, carte de séjour, Aufenthaltstitel), the holder becomes a legal resident of the country and may circulate freely in the other 28 Schengen countries in tourist mode, without burning the 90/180 quota.

The classic confusion: American with a Portuguese D visa thinks they can work in Germany. They can't. A D visa grants residence only in the issuing country — circulation in others is tourism only. To work in another Schengen country, you need a D visa from that other country, or the EU Blue Card for qualified positions.

Portugal in particular has become a hub for D8 digital nomad visas (created October 2022) for Americans working remotely.

---

### The 5 traps that cost a SIS ban

**TL;DR**: The mistakes that trigger a Schengen Information System entry and a 1-5 year ban are: overstaying more than 90 days, working without authorization, declaring tourism while living with a partner, presenting false documents, and ignoring an exit order. A Schengen ban applies to all 29 countries simultaneously — you can't enter through Croatia if you were banned in France.

In order of frequency in recent Frontex reports:

1. **Overstay**: staying more than 90 days within the 180-day window. Even 1 day triggers registration. Typical ban 1-3 years, up to 5. Fines from €500 to €1,200 depending on the country.

2. **Undeclared work**: teaching English on Erasmus, doing freelance programming for a US client while living in Lisbon, selling at Berlin's market. Schengen tourism prohibits local economic activity. Fine + ban + note on record.

3. **False declaration of purpose**: declaring 30 days of tourism while living with a partner who has a D visa. Border police are trained to detect this via ticket cross-checking, history, social media. Automatic ban.

4. **False or contradictory documents**: hotel reservation canceled after the stamp, doctored bank statement, invitation letter with false address. Federal crime in the country of entry + ban + extradition in serious cases.

5. **Failure to comply with exit order**: receive an order to leave Schengen and ignore it. Becomes a fugitive in SIS, automatic 5-year ban, pretrial detention if found again.

The SIS (Schengen Information System II) is a database shared by the 29 countries. Trying to enter through Croatia after being banned in France doesn't work — the system is unified. The lookup at entry stamp takes under 3 seconds.

---

### Minor errors that cost time (not a ban) at the border

**TL;DR**: Errors that don't trigger a ban but delay or deny entry for that specific trip: passport with less than 3 months remaining, no €30,000 insurance, no proof of funds, no hotel reservation shown, and one-way return ticket (poorly explained open jaw). Spending 4 hours in secondary inspection at Madrid is a common scenario.

These errors don't go on permanent record but cost hours — or denial on that trip:

- **Passport with 2 months and 29 days** after return: the rule is rigid at 3 months. Sometimes it works, sometimes not. Not worth the risk.
- **No insurance proof**: Spain, Portugal, Italy, France and Germany require a printout or PDF at arrival. The operator's app (Allianz, AXA, World Nomads) works.
- **No proof of funds**: €70 × days of stay on credit card or recent bank statement. Prepaid card works if you can show balance.
- **No hotel reservation shown**: Booking or Airbnb with confirmation. Invitation letter is only valid with copy of host's ID.
- **"Strange" itinerary**: arrive in Madrid for 60 days without booked return, declaring "I'll see." Police ask details, and vague answers lead to secondary inspection.

Secondary inspection (the "inadmissibles room") is where police investigate further. Can last 1 to 6 hours. Ends with authorized entry, entry with reduced timeframe, or return flight paid by the airline.

---

## Practical appendix

**Checklist before boarding for Schengen in 2026:**

- [ ] Passport valid 3+ months after return, with 2 blank pages
- [ ] Round-trip ticket (or onward out of Schengen) printed/in app
- [ ] Hotel or Airbnb reservation confirmed (PDF)
- [ ] Travel health insurance €30,000 minimum (policy on phone)
- [ ] Proof of funds: credit card + bank statement PDF
- [ ] Pre-calculation of days on the official 90/180 calculator
- [ ] From Q4/2026: ETIAS approved and valid
- [ ] Digital copy of all documents in email/Drive
- [ ] Address of US consulate in destination country
- [ ] STEP (Smart Traveler Enrollment Program) registration with US State Department

**Useful links and phones:**

- Official 90/180 calculator: [travel-europe.europa.eu/etias](https://travel-europe.europa.eu/etias)
- European Commission — Schengen: [home-affairs.ec.europa.eu](https://home-affairs.ec.europa.eu/policies/schengen/schengen-area_en)
- US Embassy in Lisbon: +351 21 770 2122
- US Embassy in Madrid: +34 91 587 2200
- US Embassy in Paris: +33 1 4312 2222
- US State Department travel advisories: travel.state.gov
