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Europe automates its 90-day nomad clock

3 min read
08:55UTC

The EU's Entry/Exit System has logged every non-EU arrival and departure across 29 Schengen countries since 10 April 2026. That ends the hand-stamp slack that let nomads reset the 90-day count by hopping out and back.

SocietyAssessed
Key takeaway

Automated EU borders, not national visas, now cap how long non-EU nomads can stay in Europe.

The EU Entry/Exit System (EES) has electronically logged every non-EU entry and exit across all 29 participating Schengen countries since 10 April 2026, replacing the manual passport stamp with a biometric record. 1 It enforces the Schengen 90/180-day rule, the cap that allows non-EU visitors up to 90 days inside any rolling 180.

Nomads who reset the count by crossing to Georgia, the United Kingdom, or another non-Schengen state now meet precise electronic day-counting at re-entry. The binding constraint runs automatically at the perimeter rather than through a consulate, so no national nomad visa adds Schengen days and no consular discretion can stretch the ceiling.

Georgia, the favoured hop, keeps ordinary Schengen access only to about March 2027 after the 11 June EU-Georgia dialogue held that door open while flagging a member-state suspension vote . That narrows the reset options just as EES closes the tourist-day arbitrage. Bulgaria's nomad permit, at EUR 27,533 a year , becomes the practical alternative base. Holding a residence permit in one member state is now the only lawful route for a third-country national to exceed 90 days in 180.

ETIAS (the European Travel Information and Authorisation System), a paid pre-travel clearance, is confirmed by the European Commission at EUR 20, up from a planned EUR 7, with under-18s and over-70s exempt. 2 The Commission expects it in the last quarter of 2026, adding a pre-authorisation step before a nomad even reaches the biometric count.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Europe's Schengen area lets you travel freely between 29 countries once you are inside it. If you are not an EU citizen, you can normally only stay a total of 90 days in any 180-day period. Until this April, border staff checked that by stamping your passport by hand, and stamps from different countries were rarely compared against each other. That gap let some people quietly stay longer than 90 days by nipping out to a country like Georgia or the United Kingdom and coming back in. That effectively reset the clock in practice, even though the rule itself never changed. The EU's new border computer, called the Entry/Exit System, closes that gap. It logs your face, fingerprints, and the date automatically every time you cross into or out of the 29 countries, and checks the running total itself. A second system called ETIAS, a EUR 20 travel permit you buy before you visit, is due to start later this year on top of it.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

EES took until April 2026 to go live not from a lack of political will but from the logistics of instrumenting the Schengen area's external perimeter, where land posts often lacked the fibre, power, or kiosk hardware the biometric system needs. The European Commission's own timeline slipped three times, missing 2022, 2023, and 2024 targets, after individual member states, including France and Germany, told the Schengen Committee their national systems were not ready to connect.

That pattern, national infrastructure lagging a Brussels-set deadline, is now playing out with ETIAS. The fee is confirmed, but the Commission has not yet fixed the exact quarter its own booking and payment systems will be ready to enforce it.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Nomad-visa comparison sites and day-counting apps built around self-reported entry stamps lose their main selling point once EES enforces the count automatically at the border itself.

  • Risk

    ETIAS's automated risk-screening will read directly from EES's entry-exit log when assessing applicants, so an undetected overstay recorded after 10 April could surface as a red flag when ETIAS screening goes live later this year.

First Reported In

Update #9 · Europe's 90-day clock goes biometric

European Commission, DG Migration and Home Affairs· 2 Jul 2026
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