When Can I Re-enter Schengen?
This is the single most-asked question about the 90/180 rule: "I've used my days — when can I go back?" The answer surprises people, because leaving Schengen does not start a countdown to a fresh 90. Here's how re-entry actually works, how to find your earliest legal return date, and how to read the "refill" date.
Leaving does not reset anything
The intuitive model — "stay 90 days, then wait 180 days from when I leave" — is wrong, and believing it is how people accidentally overstay on their next trip. There is no fixed waiting period that begins when you exit.
Instead, the rule looks backwards from whatever day you want to enter. On any prospective entry date, the authorities count how many days you were present in Schengen during the previous 180 days. If adding your new stay would push that count over 90, you can't enter yet. (For the full mechanics, see how the rolling window works.)
Days fall off the back of the window
The key mental model is a 180-day window that slides forward one day at a time. Each day you spend outside Schengen, the window's back edge advances — and your oldest day inside Schengen eventually drops out of view. The moment it does, that day stops counting against you. You've "refilled" one day of allowance.
So your allowance doesn't come back all at once. It comes back one day at a time, in the same order you used it, each day returning exactly 180 days after it was used.
Your refill date
A day you spent in Schengen stops counting 180 days after that day (counting inclusively).
Say your very first day of presence in the current window was 1 March 2025. That day remains counted through the next 180 days. Around 27 August 2025, the window slides past it and you get that one day back. Your next oldest day refills the day after, and so on.
"Earliest next entry" is just the first future date on which the window has room for the stay you want. If you used all 90 days and want to re-enter for even a single day, you have to wait until at least one day has refilled — which is 180 days after your first counted day.
A worked example
Suppose you spent 90 consecutive days in Schengen, entering 1 February 2026 and leaving 1 May 2026. You're now at your limit.
- You cannot re-enter on 2 May. Looking back 180 days from early May, all 90 of your days are still inside the window — you have zero allowance.
- Your first day (1 February) refills roughly 180 days later, around 30 July 2026. From that date, one day of allowance becomes available, then another the next day, and so on.
- If you want a fresh, uninterrupted 90-day stay, you need the window mostly clear. Because your block was continuous, the practical "clean slate" arrives about 180 days after your first day — roughly 30 July 2026 — at which point your days refill quickly enough to support a new long stay.
This is the precise version of the popular heuristic below.
The "90 in, 90 out" rule of thumb
If you don't want to track exact dates: 90 days in, then 90 days out, repeated, is always safe. Use your 90, leave, stay out for 90 consecutive days, and you re-enter with a full allowance. It's conservative — the rolling window often lets you back sooner if your trips were spread out — but it will never get you into trouble.
How the calculator shows this
Rather than counting 180 days forward on a calendar, the visual calculator on this site does it for you. Mark the days you've spent in Schengen and it reports:
- Next day refills on — the date your oldest counted day drops out of the window and you regain one day.
- Earliest next entry — assuming you used everything up today, the first date you could legally re-enter.
- Then max consecutive stay — how long you could stay from that re-entry date before hitting the limit again.
You can also drag the reference-date slider to any future date and read your exact day count for that day — useful for checking whether a planned return flight, not just the outbound one, is within the rules.
Important caveats
- The rule is checked on every day of your stay, including the day you plan to leave — so confirm the whole trip fits, not just the entry date.
- This applies to visa-free travelers and Type C short-stay visa holders. Long-stay (Type D) visas and residence permits follow different rules.
- This is informational, not legal advice. Confirm exact re-entry dates with the official EU short-stay calculator before booking anything you can't change.