Used now
0 / 90
Waiting for entries.
Use this page to decide whether a travel plan is legal, how long you can stay, and the exact day you can come back.
Mark past and future trips to see instantly if a window breaks the rule, how many days you have left, and when a blocked itinerary cools off.
Everything runs locally—no account required—and you can share a snapshot link when someone else needs proof.
Month window
Days before today automatically count as actual time in Schengen; future selections are treated as planned.
Start from today and pull backward or forward as you plan visas, placements, or family trips.
Click or tap toggles a day. Drag with a mouse or long-press on touch before dragging to paint selections, or start on a filled day to erase across the drag.
Used now
0 / 90
Waiting for entries.
Plan headroom
Awaiting plan
Add planned days to gauge peak usage.
Your plan
Add trips to summarise
Peak window: 0 / 90 days.
Next legal entry
Not needed
Your current plan stays within the limit.
This plan exceeds the Schengen 90/180 rule.
Guidance only: everything here depends on the dates you enter. Check official sources before travel.
Mark travel days to generate a plan check.
The gold star on the calendar highlights the next day you could re-enter legally. If it’s driven by past stays, you need time outside Schengen; if it’s driven by a future plan, change the plan or expect to wait.
Guidance only: everything here depends on the dates you enter. Real overstays can lead to cancelled trips or entry bans, so cross-check with official sources before you travel.
Red X days show up when that specific date would live inside a 180-day slice already holding 90 days of actual + planned time. Move or shorten whatever sits earlier in the span and the warning clears; leave some gap outside Schengen and later dates repair themselves automatically.
The planner tests each planned day inside its own 180-day look-back. If that exact date would push the running total past 90, it gets the red X until you move or remove something earlier in the span.
Because the 180-day window slides forward. Once older stays fall out of that span, the count drops and later days can become legal again without you changing anything else.
It marks the next day you could re-enter legally. The highlight changes slightly depending on whether it is driven by past travel or your planned dates.
“Days left” in the summary is today’s allowance. Your plan might still cram more than 90 days into a future 180-day slice, so the warning appears even if the “Used now” card looks healthy.
Not until it actually happens. Planned days are just projections, so deleting or moving them immediately updates the rolling math.
Those days become actual history, the star jumps forward, and you may owe border agents an explanation. The planner will show the new re-entry date, but the consequences are up to the authorities.
Understand the rule in detail or read through practical planner walkthroughs once you have a shareable plan.