
The Schengen Area (English: /ˈʃɛŋən/ SHENG-ən, Luxembourgish: [ˈʃæŋən] ) encompasses 29 European countries that have officially abolished border controls at their common borders. As an element within the wider area of freedom, security and justice (AFSJ) policy of the European Union (EU), it mostly functions as a single jurisdiction under a common visa policy for international travel purposes. The area is named after the 1985 Schengen Agreement and the 1990 Schengen Convention, both signed in Schengen, Luxembourg.
Schengen Area | |
---|---|
![]() Map of the Schengen Area Schengen Area Countries with open borders to the Schengen area Member of the EU committed by treaty to join the Schengen Area in the future | |
Type | Open border area of the European Union |
Members | |
Establishment | 26 March 1995 |
Area | |
• Total | 4,595,131 km2 (1,774,190 sq mi) |
Population | |
• 2021 estimate | 453,324,255 |
• Density | 98.7/km2 (255.6/sq mi) |
GDP (PPP) | 2023 estimate |
• Total | |
• Per capita | |
GDP (nominal) | 2023 estimate |
• Total | |
• Per capita |
Of the 27 EU member states, 25 are members of the Schengen Area. Cyprus and Ireland are the only EU member states that are not part of the Schengen Area. Cyprus aims to become part of the Schengen Area by the end of 2025. The country is committed by treaty to join in the future, but its participation was complicated due to its prevailing geopolitical situation since the invasion and occupation of Northern Cyprus by Turkey since 1974. Ireland maintains an opt-out and operates its own visa policy.
In addition to the member states of the European Union, all member states of the European Free Trade Association, namely Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland, have signed association agreements with the EU to be part of the Schengen Area. Moreover, the territories of four microstates – Andorra,Monaco, San Marino and Vatican City – are de facto included in the Schengen Area due to their small size and difficulty of maintaining active border controls.
The Schengen Area has a population of more than 450 million people and an area of about 4,595,000 km2 (1,774,000 sq mi). About 1.7 million people commute to work across an internal European border each day, and in some regions these international commuters constitute up to a third of the workforce. In 2015, there were 1.3 billion crossings of Schengen borders in total. 57 million crossings were due to the transport of goods by road, with a value of €2.8 trillion. The decrease in the cost of trade due to Schengen varies from 0.42% to 1.59% depending on geography, trade partners, and other factors. Countries outside of the Schengen Area also benefit. States in the Schengen Area have strengthened border controls with non-Schengen countries.
History
European borders prior to Schengen
Before World War I, most countries of the world, including Europe, had lax border policies, facilitating such educational trips as the Grand Tour amongst the wealthy.
Visas became commonplace during the interwar period, as did border controls. After World War II, however, customs unions arose between various European countries. The Nordic countries allowed free movement and residence between them in 1954, and the countries of Benelux opened their mutual borders in 1960. This reflected a greater trend towards European integration; the European Communities (EC), the predecessor of the EU, were established in the 1950s for economic cooperation, though they did not deal with border control issues.
Schengen Agreement
The first move towards the abolition of border controls between EC member states took place on 14 June 1985 with the signing of the Schengen Agreement by five EEC members – the Benelux countries as well as France and West Germany – of the then ten EEC member states. These five countries entered into the Schengen Agreement separately from the European Communities, because consensus could not be reached among all EEC member states.
The Agreement was supplemented in 1990 by the Schengen Convention, which proposed the abolition of internal border controls and a common visa policy. The Agreements and the rules adopted under them continued to be separate from the EC structures, and led to the creation of the Schengen Area on 26 March 1995.
As more EU member states signed the Schengen Agreement, consensus was reached on absorbing it into the procedures of the EU. The Agreement and its related conventions were incorporated into the mainstream of European Union law by the Amsterdam Treaty in 1997, which came into effect in 1999. A consequence of the Agreement being part of European law is that any amendment or regulation is made within its processes, in which the non-EU members are not participants.
The UK, the Crown Dependencies, and the Republic of Ireland have operated a Common Travel Area (CTA) since 1923 (with passport-free travel and freedom of movement with each other), but the UK would not abolish border controls with any other countries and therefore opted out of the Agreement. While not signing the Schengen Treaty, the Republic of Ireland has always looked more favourably on joining, but has not done so in order to maintain the CTA and its open border with Northern Ireland.
Common Schengen Visa Policy
The common visa policy allows nationals of certain countries to enter the Schengen Area via air, land or sea without a visa for stays of up to 90 days within a 180-day period. Nationals of certain other countries are required to have a visa either upon arrival or in transit.
Current members
The Schengen Area consists of 29 countries, including four which are not members of the European Union – Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland. Iceland and Norway are part of the Nordic Passport Union and are officially classified as states associated with the Schengen activities of the European Union. Switzerland was allowed to participate in the same manner in 2008, and Liechtenstein in 2011.
Romania and Bulgaria are the newest members of the Schengen Area, with border controls lifted for air and sea travel on 31 March 2024 and land border controls lifted effective 1 January 2025, more than 17 years after they acceded to the European Union. In 2011 the European Commission concluded that the two countries had fulfilled all technical accession criteria, and their participation was approved by the European Parliament. However this was rejected by the Council of Ministers, with some countries (such as Denmark and Finland) citing concerns about shortcomings in anti-corruption measures and in the fight against organised crime. The Netherlands conditioned approval for joining the Schengen Area on positive reports under the Mechanism for Cooperation and Verification.Austria was the last country to end their veto, after series of negotiations to address concerns that the countries were a major transit route for illegal immigration to the country.
De facto, the Schengen Area also includes four European micro-states – Andorra, Monaco, San Marino, and the Vatican City – that maintain open or semi-open borders with other Schengen member countries.
Ireland negotiated opt-outs from Schengen and continues to operate border controls with other EU member states, while at the same time being part of the open-border Common Travel Area with the United Kingdom (a former EU member that had held a similar opt-out) and the Crown Dependencies.
Summary table
State | Area (km2) | Population (2021) | Date signed | Date of first implementation |
---|---|---|---|---|
83,871 | 8,922,082 | 28 April 1995 | 1 December 1997 | |
30,528 | 11,611,419 | 14 June 1985 | 26 March 1995 | |
110,994 | 6,885,868 | 25 April 2005 | 31 March 2024 | |
56,594 | 4,060,135 | 9 December 2011 | 1 January 2023 | |
78,866 | 10,510,751 | 16 April 2003 | 21 December 2007 | |
(excluding Greenland and the Faroe Islands) | 43,094 | 5,854,240 | 19 December 1996 | 25 March 2001 |
45,338 | 1,328,701 | 16 April 2003 | 21 December 2007 | |
(including Åland) | 338,145 | 5,535,992 | 19 December 1996 | 25 March 2001 |
(excluding Overseas France) | 551,695 | 64,531,444 | 14 June 1985 | 26 March 1995 |
(including Büsingen am Hochrhein) | 357,022 | 83,408,554 | 14 June 1985 | 26 March 1995 |
(including Mount Athos) | 131,990 | 10,445,365 | 6 November 1992 | 1 January 2000 |
93,030 | 9,709,786 | 16 April 2003 | 21 December 2007 | |
103,000 | 370,335 | 19 December 1996 18 May 1999 | 25 March 2001 | |
301,318 | 59,240,329 | 27 November 1990 | 26 October 1997 | |
64,589 | 1,873,919 | 16 April 2003 | 21 December 2007 | |
160 | 39,039 | 28 February 2008 | 19 December 2011 | |
65,300 | 2,786,651 | 16 April 2003 | 21 December 2007 | |
2,586 | 639,321 | 14 June 1985 | 26 March 1995 | |
316 | 526,748 | 16 April 2003 | 21 December 2007 | |
(excluding Dutch Caribbean) | 41,526 | 17,501,696 | 14 June 1985 | 26 March 1995 |
(excluding overseas territories and dependencies) | 385,155 | 5,403,021 | 19 December 1996 18 May 1999 | 25 March 2001 |
312,683 | 38,307,726 | 16 April 2003 | 21 December 2007 | |
(including Azores and Madeira) | 92,391 | 10,290,103 | 25 June 1991 | 26 March 1995 |
238,391 | 19,328,560 | 25 April 2005 | 31 March 2024 | |
49,037 | 5,447,622 | 16 April 2003 | 21 December 2007 | |
20,273 | 2,119,410 | 16 April 2003 | 21 December 2007 | |
(including Canary Islands) (special provisions for Ceuta and Melilla) | 505,990 | 47,486,935 | 25 June 1991 | 26 March 1995 |
449,964 | 10,467,097 | 19 December 1996 | 25 March 2001 | |
41,285 | 8,691,406 | 26 October 2004 | 12 December 2008 | |
4,595,131 | 453,234,255 | 14 June 1985 | 26 March 1995 |
State | Area (km2) | Population (2021) |
---|---|---|
467.63 | 79,034 | |
2.02 | 36,686 | |
61.2 | 33,745 | |
0.49 | 511 |
Notes
- The original agreement, a subsequent protocol extending the agreement to the state, an agreement on accession to the EU, or agreement on association with the Schengen acquis.
- Of the provisions related to the elimination of border controls. In some cases the provisions related to the Schengen Information System were applied earlier.
- The elimination of border controls took place from 1 December 1997 to 31 March 1998.
- For air and sea borders, 1 January 2025 for land borders.
- For land and sea borders, 26 March 2023 for air borders.
- For land and sea borders, 30 March 2008 for air borders.
- Greenland and the Faroe Islands are not included in the Schengen Area. However, persons travelling between the Faroe Islands, Greenland and the Schengen Area are not subject to border checks. The list of countries whose citizens require a visa for Greenland or the Faroe Islands is the same as for the Schengen Area, but a Schengen visa will not allow the holder access to either territory, only a Danish visa stamped with either "Valid for the Faroe Islands" or "Valid for Greenland", or both.
- The overseas departments and collectivities of France are not part of the Schengen Area. However, when travelling by air from metropolitan France directly to French Guiana, Guadeloupe, Martinique, Mayotte and Réunion, border checks by the French Border Police only take place at the departure airport, not at the arrival airport (where passengers walk past the passport control booths, which will be unstaffed). This arrangement does not, however, apply to direct flights from other Schengen member states, such as the past Charleroi-Guadeloupe and Charleroi-Martinique flights by Air Belgium. On the other hand, passengers flying from French Guiana, Guadeloupe, Martinique, Mayotte and Réunion directly to metropolitan France have to undergo border checks by the French Border Police both on departure and on arrival (an arrangement known as 'double contrôle').
- The Schengen Agreement and Schengen convention were both signed by West Germany. However, they entered into force after German reunification and so also applied to the former East Germany from the same date.
- For Büsingen am Hochrhein since 12 December 2008
- According to a legally non-binding declaration attached to the Greek accession agreement to the Schengen convention, the special status according to the Greek constitution of Mount Athos, has to be taken into account in the application and subsequent preparation of the Schengen acquis.
- The elimination of border controls took place from 1 January to 26 March 2000. Greece had no land borders with any other country in the Schengen area until 1 January 2025, when Bulgaria eliminated land border controls with other Schengen states.
- EFTA state, which is outside the EU, that is associated with the Schengen activities of the EU, and where the Schengen rules apply.
- A second agreement, which replaced the first, was signed with Iceland and Norway following the incorporation of the Schengen Agreement into EU law with the Treaty of Amsterdam of 1997.
- The elimination of border controls took place from 26 October 1997 to 31 March 1998.
- The full Schengen acquis applies to all Spanish territories, but there are border checks on departure from Ceuta and Melilla to Peninsular Spain or other Schengen countries, because of specific arrangements for visa exemptions for Moroccan nationals resident in the provinces of Tetuan and Nador.
- For sea and land borders; since 29 March 2009 also for air borders.
Potential enlargement
The procedure to enter the Schengen Area is that European Commission evaluates certain criteria. These criteria include border control legislation, infrastructure and organisation, personal data protection, visas, deportations, police cooperation and more. After a positive evaluation the Schengen members of the Council of the European Union decides unanimously together with the European Parliament to accept the new member.
Cyprus
Cyprus as EU member state is committed by its Treaties of Accession to join the Schengen Area eventually. However, before fully implementing the Schengen rules, the state must have its preparedness assessed in four areas: air borders, visas, police cooperation, and personal data protection. This evaluation process involves a questionnaire and visits by EU experts to selected institutions and workplaces in the country under assessment.
Although Cyprus, which joined the EU on 1 May 2004, is legally bound to join the Schengen Area, implementation has been delayed because of the Cyprus dispute. According to former Cypriot Minister of Foreign Affairs Giorgos Lillikas, "strict and full control based on Schengen will create a huge tribulation on a daily basis for the Turkish Cypriots" of Northern Cyprus, and it is unclear if this control is possible before the resolution of the dispute. The British Sovereign Base Areas of Akrotiri and Dhekelia, a British Overseas Territory which is outside the EU, also needs "other handling and mechanisms". Akrotiri and Dhekelia has no border control to Cyprus, but has its own border control at its air base.
In November 2019, Cyprus's Foreign Affairs Minister Nikos Christodoulides revealed that Cyprus formally began the process of joining the Schengen Area in September. In July 2023, Cyprus joined the Schengen Information System (SIS), which allows for cooperation on crime, immigration and other security-related matters within the Schengen Area. In October 2023, the commission was to "verify that the necessary conditions for the application of the Schengen acquis in the field of the Schengen Information System have been met". The Cypriot President Nikos Christodoulides expects the country to be ready to join the Schengen Area by the end of 2025.
Gibraltar
As a result of Brexit, Gibraltar ceased to be part of the European Union on 31 January 2020, although for most purposes it was treated as part of it during the transition phase until 31 December 2020. Like the United Kingdom, it had not been part of the Schengen Area but, unlike the United Kingdom, Gibraltar had also been outside of the EU customs union. Owing to a declaration lodged by the United Kingdom with the EEC in 1982, in view of the entry into force of the British Nationality Act 1981, Gibraltarians had been counted as British nationals for the purposes of Community law, and as such they had enjoyed full free movement within the European Economic Area and Switzerland. During the Brexit transition period until 31 December 2020, Gibraltar was still for most purposes treated as an EU territory.
On 31 December 2020, the governments of Spain and of the United Kingdom (advised by the Government of Gibraltar) came to an agreement in principle on a framework for a UK-EU treaty on aspects of Gibraltar's future relationship with the European Union. Both Spain and the Head of the UK Mission to the European Union subsequently indicated with the European Commission their desire that such an agreement be negotiated and that the EU should seek a mandate for that purpose.
Chief Minister of Gibraltar Fabian Picardo stated that he anticipates that the arrangement, which will apply for an initial period of four years, will make Gibraltar's port and airport entry points to the Schengen Area. These entry points will be managed by a Frontex operation. Spain, as the neighbouring Schengen member state, will be responsible as regards the European Union for the implementation of the Schengen acquis. Residents of Gibraltar, regardless of their nationality, are anticipated to enjoy maximised and unrestricted mobility to the Schengen Area. UK citizens who are not residents of Gibraltar will be subjected to third-country national checks when they enter Gibraltar through the Gibraltar port or airport. It is anticipated that the third-country national check will entail two controls, one by Gibraltar's Borders and Coastguard Agency, giving entry into Gibraltar, and one by Frontex, giving entry into the Schengen Area. Picardo likened this arrangement to the juxtaposed controls at Eurostar stations, although he admitted the situation there is slightly different.
On 31 December 2020, Spain's foreign minister, Arancha González Laya said that she anticipated that it would take about six months to negotiate and conclude a treaty but that in the meantime Spain would work to ensure that mobility at the border would be "as fluid as possible".
Apart from the unrestricted mobility of persons, the negotiations will also seek to address maximised and unrestricted mobility of goods between Gibraltar and the European Union, and consider matters related to the environment, the level playing field, social security coordination, citizens' rights, data and matters related to continued document recognition.
On 6 October 2021, the EU agreed to open formal negotiations with UK anticipating an agreement on Gibraltar, and negotiations started soon after. They were ongoing as of February 2022; hopes were they would finish during spring 2022. As of December 2022[update], negotiations were continuing, but appeared to be deadlocked over policing of passport control at Gibraltar airport.
Summary table
State/territory | Area (km2) | Population (2021) | EU accession | Target date | Obstacles |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
9,251 | 1,244,188 | 1 May 2004 | 2025 | Cease Fire line, caused by Cyprus conflict. | |
(United Kingdom) | 6.8 | 32,669 | n/a | No date set | The EU and the United Kingdom are to negotiate a treaty or other arrangement to apply to Gibraltar, based on the agreement reached between the United Kingdom and Spain on 31 December 2020. Gibraltar is not a sovereign state, so in international law the United Kingdom acts on behalf of Gibraltar. |
Notes
- Agreement on accession to the EU
- Desired timeline of joining state for Council decision
- Application of Schengen rules in Gibraltar is not to be conditional on joining the EU. The United Kingdom (and thus Gibraltar) was a member of the EU (but not Schengen) from 1 January 1973 to 31 January 2020.
Territories of Schengen states outside the Area
There are territories of Schengen member states that are exempted from the Schengen Agreement. The only areas of Schengen member states located in Europe but excluded are the Faroe Islands and Svalbard. Until 2008, when Switzerland joined the Schengen Area, the German exclave Busingen am Hochrhein, a small village in Baden-Württemberg, remained outside of the Schengen Area, being completely surrounded by Switzerland.
French territories
The French overseas departments of French Guiana, Guadeloupe, Martinique, Mayotte and Réunion, and the overseas collectivity of Saint Martin are part of the European Union but do not form part of the Schengen Area; so one cannot travel there with a Schengen Visa. The freedom of movement provisions of the EU apply, but each territory operates its own visa regime for non-European Economic Area (EEA), non-Swiss nationals. While a visa valid for one of these territories will be valid for all, visa exemption lists differ. A Schengen visa, even one issued by France, is not valid for these territories. A visa for Sint Maarten (which is valid for travelling to the Dutch side of the island of Saint Martin) is also valid for the French side. France also has several territories which are neither part of the EU nor the Schengen Area. These are: French Polynesia, French Southern and Antarctic Lands, New Caledonia, Saint Barthélemy, Saint-Pierre and Miquelon, and Wallis and Futuna.
Dutch territories
Only the Netherlands' European territory is part of the Schengen Area. Six Dutch territories in the Caribbean are outside the Area. Three of these territories – Bonaire, Sint Eustatius and Saba (collectively known as the BES islands) – are special municipalities within the Netherlands proper. The other three – Aruba, Curaçao and Sint Maarten – are autonomous countries within the Kingdom of the Netherlands. All islands retain their status as Overseas countries and territories and are thus not part of the European Union. The six territories have a separate visa system from the European part of the Netherlands and people travelling between these islands and the Schengen Area are subjected to full border checks, with a passport being required even for EU/Schengen citizens, including Dutch (national ID cards are not accepted).
Norwegian territories
Svalbard is part of Norway and has a special status under international law. It is not part of the Schengen Area. There is no visa regime in existence for Svalbard either for entry, residence or work, but it is difficult to visit Svalbard without travelling through the Schengen Area, although there are charter flights from Russia. Since 2011, the Norwegian government has imposed systematic border checks on individuals wishing to enter and leave Svalbard, requiring a passport or national identity card for non-Norwegian citizens. As a result, the border between Svalbard and the rest of Norway is largely treated like any other external Schengen border.[need quotation to verify] A Schengen visa must be multiple entry to allow returning to Norway. There is no welfare or asylum system for immigrants on Svalbard, and people incapable of supporting themselves may be sent away.
Danish territories
The Danish territories of the Faroe Islands and Greenland are neither part of the European Union nor part of the Schengen Area, and visas to Denmark are not automatically valid in these territories. However, both of these territories lack border controls on arrivals from the Schengen Area, and the air or sea carriers are responsible for carrying out document checks before boarding, as is common for travel inside the Schengen Area. Citizens of EU/EFTA countries can travel to the Faroes using a passport or a national ID card and to Greenland using a passport, but citizens of Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway or Sweden can use any acceptable identification such as driving licences or bank ID cards; although this is advised against since aircraft might be diverted to Scotland in bad weather.
European microstates
Four European microstates — Andorra,Monaco, San Marino and the Vatican City — are not officially part of the Schengen Area, but are considered de facto within the Schengen Area, as they have open or semi-open borders and do not conduct systematic border controls with the Schengen countries that surround them. Some national laws have the text "countries against which border control is not performed based on the Schengen Agreement and the 562/2006 EU regulation", which then includes the microstates and other non-EU areas with open borders.[citation needed]
In 2015, Andorra, Monaco and San Marino began negotiating an Association Agreement with the EU. Monaco left the negotiations in 2023, while an agreement for Andorra and San Marino was expected to be concluded in 2024. Andorra's ambassador to Spain, Jaume Gaytán, stated in 2015 that he hoped that the agreement would include provisions to make the states associate members of the Schengen Agreement. However, the final text only concerned free movement of people and not border control issues. However, on 30 May 2024, the Council of the European Union authorised the opening of negotiations for agreements between the European Union and Andorra and San Marino, respectively, in order to create a legal basis for the absence of border controls between these countries and the Schengen area.
Principality of Andorra
A landlocked country, Andorra does not have an airport or seaport, but there are several heliports. Visitors to the country can gain access only by road or helicopter through Schengen members France or Spain. Andorra has no systematic border controls with either France or Spain. Border control points exist and border controls may be carried out in the other direction, but these are more focused on customs control (Andorra has considerably lower taxes than its neighbours, with for example a standard VAT rate of just 4.5%). Andorra does not have any visa requirements. Citizens of EU countries need either a national identity card or passport to enter Andorra, while anyone else requires a passport or equivalent. Schengen visas are accepted, but those travellers who need a visa to enter the Schengen Area need a multiple-entry visa to visit Andorra, because entering Andorra means leaving the Schengen Area, and re-entering France or Spain is considered a new entry into the Schengen Area. Andorran citizens do not receive a passport stamp when they enter and leave the Schengen Area. As of June 2024, the German Ministry of Foreign Affairs reports that Andorra has a de facto open border with Spain and France.
Principality of Liechtenstein
Liechtenstein is also landlocked and does not have an international airport. It has been a member of the Schengen Area since 2011. It does not have a border check at Balzers heliport, as flights to and from Balzers must be to or from the Schengen Area. Liechtenstein does not issue visas and as such recommends visitors apply for a visa in another Schengen country.
Principality of Monaco
Monaco has an open border with France. Schengen laws are administered as if it were part of the EU as a result of bilateral agreements with France, and Schengen visas are accepted. Both French and Monégasque authorities carry out checks at Monaco's seaport and heliport.
Republic of San Marino
San Marino has an open border with Italy, although some random checks are made by Italy's Guardia di Finanza and San Marino's Guardia di Rocca.
Vatican City State
The Vatican City has an open border with Italy. However, there is no customs union between Italy and Vatican City, hence vehicles may be subject to checks at the border. Typical border controls would not be suitable in Vatican City, due to its small size, high number of pedestrian visitors and unique position as an enclave within Rome. In 2006, the Vatican City showed interest in joining the Schengen agreement for closer cooperation in information sharing and similar activities covered by the Schengen Information System.
Opt-outs
Denmark
Denmark maintains an opt-out from the wider AFSJ policy area, but has adopted the Schengen acquis on an intergovernmental basis, however with an exemption for the autonomous territories of Greenland and Faroe Islands. Denmark does not have voting rights for introductions and revocations of measures applied to the Schengen Area as a result of this opt-out.
Ireland and the United Kingdom
When EU states were negotiating subsuming the Schengen Agreement into the EU by the Treaty of Amsterdam, Ireland and the United Kingdom were the only member states that had not signed the Agreement. The UK did not want to join and Ireland wished to maintain its Common Travel Area with the United Kingdom and associated islands, an arrangement that would be incompatible with Schengen membership while the UK remained out. As a result, both negotiated an opt-out from the part of the treaty which was to incorporate the Schengen rules (or acquis) into EU Law when it came into effect on 1 May 1999. Under the relevant protocol, either may request to participate in aspects of the Schengen acquis but this is subject to the approval of the Schengen states.
On 31 January 2020, the United Kingdom withdrew from the European Union and the protocol ceased to apply to it. Ireland will continue to operate the Common Travel Area and not join the Schengen Area for the foreseeable future, because it wants to keep open its land border with the UK.
In 1999, the UK formally requested participation in certain provisions of the Schengen acquis – Title III relating to Police Security and Judicial Cooperation, and this request was approved by the Council of the European Union on 29 May 2000. The United Kingdom's formal participation in the previously approved areas of cooperation was put into effect by a 2004 Council decision that came into effect on 1 January 2005. Although the United Kingdom was not part of the Schengen passport-free area, it still used the Schengen Information System, a governmental database used by European countries to store and disseminate information on individuals and property. This allowed the UK to exchange information with countries that are a part of the Schengen agreement, often for the sake of liaising over law enforcement. In 2020, the UK declared its intent to withdraw from these arrangements at the end of its transition period, and did so on 31 December 2020.
In contrast, while Ireland initially submitted a request to participate in the Schengen acquis in 2002, which was approved by the Council of the European Union, that decision took nearly eighteen years to be put into effect. In February 2010 the Irish Minister for Justice, in response to a parliamentary question, said that: "The measures which will enable Ireland to meet its Schengen requirements are currently being progressed". Ireland joined the law enforcement aspect of SIS II on 1 January 2021 with plans to have "full operational capacity" two months later. Ireland is connected to the Schengen Information System (SIS II) and systematically checks all identity documents on SIS II at airports and designated ports of entry (including flights from the UK).
Economics
Total trade between any two countries in the Schengen Area increases by approximately 0.1% per year. The same amount of increase in trade is gained again for every 1% annual increase in immigration between the countries. On average, at each border the removal of controls is equivalent to the removal of a 0.7% tariff, and the cost savings on a trade route increase with the number of internal borders crossed. Countries outside of the Schengen Area also benefit.
Movement of people
About 1.7 million people commute to work across a European border each day, and in some regions these people constitute up to a third of the workforce. For example, 2.1% of the workers in Hungary work in another country, primarily Austria and Slovakia. Each year, there are 1.3 billion crossings of Schengen borders in total. 57 million crossings are due to transport of goods by road, with a value of €2.8 trillion each year. The trade in goods is affected more strongly than trade in services, and the decrease in the cost of trade varies from 0.42% to 1.59% depending on geography, trade partners, and other factors.
Transit of goods
The Single Administrative Document (SAD) is a customs declaration form used for goods entering or exiting the European Union. Traders and agents can use the SAD to assist with declaring import, export, transit and community status declarations in manual processing situations.
The TIR Convention procedure is used for transit operations that begin, end, or travel in a third, non-EU country that is a signatory to the convention.
A Transit Accompanying Document (TAD) can be produced at the point of departure or by an authorised consignor. It includes a barcode and the movement reference number that matches the transit declaration. This is useful if goods are diverted or delayed.
EORI numbers are an official link to a specific registered address of a business concerned with arranging the export, import or movement of goods across the EU. It may also link to official records (Union Customs Code) describing the nature of the goods and the identity of vehicles or haulers to be used.
Regulation of internal borders
Before the implementation of the Schengen Agreement, most borders in Europe were patrolled and a vast network of border posts existed around the continent, to check the identity and entitlement of people wishing to travel from one country to another.
Since the implementation of the Schengen rules, border posts have been closed (and often entirely removed) between participating countries.
The Schengen Borders Code requires participating states to remove all obstacles to free traffic flow at internal borders. Thus, road, rail and air passengers no longer have their identity checked by border guards when travelling between Schengen countries, although security controls by carriers are still permissible. Per EU guidelines all EU citizens are advised to bring a passport or national identity card, as one may be required.
Passport stamps are never issued when travelling between Schengen member states, even when border controls between Schengen member states are temporarily re-introduced.
Internal checks
Although EU and EFTA nationals travelling within the Schengen Area are not required to show passports, national identity cards or other identity documents at an internal border, the laws of most countries still require them to carry national identity documents and to produce them to an authorised person on request. Different rules apply to other nationals. It is the obligation of everyone travelling within the area to be able to show a fully valid form of personal identification accepted by other Schengen states, typically one issued by the state.
According to the Schengen rules, hotels and other types of commercial accommodation must register all foreign citizens, including citizens of other Schengen states, by requiring the completion of a registration form by their own hand. This does not apply to accompanying spouses and minor children or members of travel groups. In addition, a valid identification document has to be produced to the hotel manager or staff. The Schengen rules do not require any other procedures; thus, the Schengen states are free to regulate further details on the content of the registration forms, and identity documents which are to be produced, and may also require the persons exempted from registration by Schengen laws to be registered. Enforcement of these rules varies by country.
The Schengen regulation on crossing internal borders describes the checks for foreigners done by the police at suitable places inside each country.[clarification needed]
Internal controls
The European Union constitutes a customs union and a Value Added Tax area. However, not all Schengen states or all of the territory of Schengen states are part of the customs union or VAT area. Some countries therefore legally conduct customs controls targeted at illegal goods, such as drugs.
Security checks can legally be carried out at ports and airports. Also police checks can be conducted if they:
- do not have border control as an objective;
- are based on general police information and experience regarding possible threats to public security and aim, in particular, to combat cross-border crime;
- are devised and executed in a manner clearly distinct from systematic checks on persons at the external borders;
- are carried out on the basis of spot-checks.
Air travel
For flights within the Schengen Area (either between Schengen member states or within the same Schengen member state), law enforcement agencies, airport authorities and air carriers are permitted only to carry out security checks on passengers and may not carry out border checks. Such security checks can be conducted through the verification of the passenger's passport or national identity card: such a practice must be used only to verify the passenger's identity (for commercial or transport security reasons) and not his or her immigration status. For this reason, law enforcement agencies, airport authorities and air carriers cannot require air passengers flying within the Schengen Area who are third-country nationals to prove the legality of their stay by showing a valid visa or residence permit. In addition, according to European Commission guidelines, identity checks on air passengers flying within the Schengen Area should take place only either at check-in, or upon entry to the secured zone of the airport, or at the boarding gate: passengers should not be required to undergo a verification of their identity on more than one occasion before their flight within the Schengen Area. Notwithstanding those principles, the identity checks function as practical border controls and they affect illegal immigrants who arrive in Greece (which until 2024 had no land border to another Schengen country, although those land border controls can be reestablished if needed) and want to fly to some other Schengen country. The requirements as to which identity document to possess varies by country and airline. Normally a passport or EU national identity card is needed.
Travellers boarding flights between Schengen countries, but originating from a third country outside the area, are required to go through Schengen entry border checks upon arrival in the Schengen Area. This is because the route originates outside the Schengen Area and the authorities at the final destination would have no way of differentiating between arriving passengers who boarded at the origin and those who joined in the middle. Additionally, travellers are required to process through Schengen exit border checks upon departure.
Temporary border controls
A Schengen member state is permitted to reinstate border controls with another Schengen member state for a short period where there is a serious threat to that state's "public policy or internal security" or when the "control of an external border is no longer ensured due to exceptional circumstances". When such risks arise out of foreseeable events, the state in question must notify the European Commission in advance and consult with other Schengen states.
The introduction of temporary controls at internal borders is a prerogative of the member states. Although the European Commission may issue an opinion about the necessity and proportionality of introducing temporary controls at internal borders, it cannot veto or override such a decision if it is taken by a member state.
In April 2022 the European Court of Justice clarified that temporary internal border controls cannot exceed a duration of six months for one and the same threat. Only in case of a new serious threat "the member state may apply such a measure afresh, even immediately after the six-month period has ended." The ruling reinforced existing criticism of the quasi permanent controls in several member states since 2015 as being an unlawful violation of the Schengen Code.
In April 2010, Malta introduced temporary checks due to Pope Benedict XVI's visit. It reimposed checks in 2015 in the weeks surrounding the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting.
Estonia introduced temporary checks in September 2014 due to the visit of US President Barack Obama.
In response to the European migrant crisis in 2015, several Schengen countries set up border controls.
In November 2017, Germany introduced temporary checks on flights arriving from Greece. Between November 2017 and February 2018, of the 280,000 passengers on flights from Greece who were checked on arrival in Germany, 270 were denied entry into Germany. On 12 May 2018, Germany ended the temporary checks on incoming flights from Greece.
In 2019, Denmark set up border controls with Sweden due to serious attacks by Swedish citizens.
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, almost all Schengen countries set up border controls. Several of these controls blocked citizens of EU/Schengen countries from entering, allowed only citizens or residents of the country to enter, plus prioritised traffic like food transport. On 27 March 2020, the European Commission published 'Guidelines concerning the exercise of the free movement of workers during COVID-19 outbreak', stating that member states should allow cross-border workers 'unhindered access' and 'ensure a smooth passage' across the internal Schengen borders if they exercise a 'critical occupation' (such as health professionals, care workers, scientists in health-related fields, workers in the pharmaceutical and medical services/food/transportation/essential infrastructure industries, engineers, Information and Communications Technology professionals, firefighters/police officers/prison officers/security guards, fishermen and public servants). Further, any health screening for cross-border workers must be carried out under the same conditions as the member state's own nationals exercising the same occupations.
In September 2024, Germany announced it would temporarily introduce checks at all of its land borders, in order to tackle irregular migration. The controls were scheduled to be in force for six months.
Internal border controls in place since 2015
The table below lists internal border controls in place as of January 2025, according to the information that the member states have provided to the European Commission.
Member state | Internal borders | Official reasons (may have varied over time) | First day | Last day (currently planned) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Land borders with Slovakia and the Czech Republic | European migrant crisis, pressure on the asylum reception system, high migratory pressure at the EU's external border to Turkey and the Western Balkans, threat of arms trafficking and criminal networks due to the war in Ukraine, human smuggling | 16 October 2024 | 15 April 2025 | |
Land borders with Hungary and Slovenia | 12 November 2024 | 11 May 2025 | ||
Land border and ferry connections with Romania | European migrant crisis, migratory pressure caused by crises in Afghanistan, Gaza, Lebanon, and Syria. Imposed and agreed on temporarily as a condition for admission of Bulgaria and Romania, fixed by the Budapest agreement | 1 January 2025 | 30 June 2025 | |
Land and sea borders with Germany; all internal borders | European migrant crisis, Islamist terrorist threat, organised crime, smuggling, 2022 invasion of Ukraine, irregular migration along the Central Mediterranean route | 4 January 2016 | 11 May 2025 | |
Land borders with Belgium, Luxembourg, Germany, Switzerland, Italy and Spain | Terrorism, European migrant crisis, 2022 invasion of Ukraine, increase in irregular entry flows at the external borders | 13 November 2015 | 30 April 2025 | |
Land border with Austria | Terrorism, European migrant crisis, increase in irregular migration from Turkey through the Western Balkans, strain on the asylum reception system, human smuggling | 13 September 2015 | 15 September 2025 | |
Land borders with the Czech Republic, Poland and Switzerland | 16 June 2024 | 15 September 2025 | ||
Land borders with Belgium, Denmark, France, Luxembourg and the Netherlands | 16 September 2024 | 15 September 2025 | ||
Land border with Slovenia | Israel–Hamas war, European migrant crisis, Islamist terrorist threat, security risks associated with the 2025 Jubilee | 21 October 2023 | 18 June 2025 | |
Land and air borders with Belgium and Germany | Irregular migration and migrant smuggling | 9 December 2024 | 8 June 2025 | |
Ports with ferry connections to the Schengen Area | 2022 invasion of Ukraine, threat to critical on-shore and off-shore infrastructures | 26 November 2015 | 11 May 2025 | |
Land borders with Croatia and Hungary | Israel–Hamas war, 2022 invasion of Ukraine, European migrant crisis, Islamist terrorist threat, organised crime | 21 October 2023 | 21 June 2025 | |
All internal borders | European migrant crisis, Islamist terrorist threat | 12 November 2015 | 11 May 2025 |
French controls against migrants from northern Africa
Following the Tunisian Revolution of 2010–11, the government of Italy gave six-month residence permits to some 25,000 Tunisian migrants. This allowed the migrants to travel freely in the Schengen Area. In response, both France and Germany threatened to impose border checks, not wanting the Tunisian refugees to enter their territory. In April 2011, for several hours, France blocked trains carrying the migrants at the France–Italy border at Ventimiglia.
At the request of France, in May 2011 the European Commissioner for Home Affairs, Cecilia Malmström proposed that more latitude would be available for the temporary re-establishment of border control in the case of strong and unexpected migratory pressure, or the failure of a state to protect the external borders of the EU.
On 25 July 2011, in delivering the European Commission's final assessment on the measures taken by Italy and France, the Home Affairs Commissioner Cecilia Malmström said, "from a formal point of view steps taken by Italian and French authorities have been in compliance with EU law. However, I regret that the spirit of the Schengen rules has not been fully respected". Malmström also called for a more coherent interpretation of the Schengen rules and a stronger evaluation and monitoring system for the Schengen Area.
2015 migrant crisis
During the migrant crisis of September 2015, Germany announced it was temporarily bringing border controls back in accordance with the provisions on temporary border controls laid down by the Schengen acquis. Such border controls appear to be an attempt to prevent disorder from making the crisis worse. Open borders appeared to have impeded Germany's ability to provide for very large numbers of persons seeking refuge all at once. Germany signals the border controls are only temporary, and only to support an orderly flow of migration into the area.[needs update]
Other countries, including Austria, Denmark, Slovenia, Hungary, Sweden and Norway have set up border controls in response to the crisis.
In December 2015, Sweden passed a temporary law that allows the government to oblige all transport companies to check that their passengers carry valid photographic identification. The new law came into effect on 21 December 2015 and was valid until 21 December 2018. The government decided that the new rules would apply from 4 January 2016 until 4 July 2016. The law led to the mandatory train change and passage through border control at Copenhagen Airport for travellers between Copenhagen and Sweden, and with a reduction in service frequency. Sweden had introduced border control from Denmark earlier (15 November 2015), but that could not stop the migrant flow, since they have the right to apply for asylum once on Swedish ground. First when the transport companies had to stop foreigners on the Danish side, asylum seekers were efficiently stopped. This caused considerable disruption to the train traffic since the railway station did not have capacity for such checks. These checks lasted until 4 May 2017, after the EU commission declared such checks not acceptable.
On 30 May 2018, when the migrant crisis border controls were still active in some countries, the European Parliament decided to condemn prolonged border checks between Schengen Area member countries. But this was only a statement as the Parliament does not decide this.
2015 Paris attacks
After the November 2015 Paris attacks, France introduced full identity and nationality checks at its borders. However border controls were already in place the day of the attacks (13 November) because of the upcoming 21st UN Conference on Climate Change.
Coronavirus response in 2020
Although some European politicians did call for Europe's internal borders to be temporarily closed, the European Union decided in late February 2020 to turn down the idea of suspending the Schengen free travel area and introducing border controls with Italy. The deputy leader of the Swiss Ticino League, Lorenzo Quadri, criticised the decision: "It is alarming that the dogma of wide-open borders is considered a priority." United States President Donald Trump said the European Union had "failed to take the same precautions and restrict travel from China and other hot spots" as the U.S. had implemented.
Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babiš stated in early March that "European countries cannot ban the entry of Italian citizens within the Schengen Area. The only possible way is to have the Italian prime minister call on his fellow citizens to refrain from travelling to other countries of the European Union."
After Slovakia, Denmark, the Czech Republic and Poland in mid-March announced complete closure of their national borders, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said that "Certain controls may be justified, but general travel bans are not seen as being the most effective by the World Health Organization. Moreover, they have a strong social and economic impact, they disrupt people's lives and business across the borders." Von der Leyen also apologised to Italy, amidst widespread discontent among Italians for the lack of solidarity shown by Europe. By the end of March 2020, almost all internal Schengen borders had been closed to non-essential travel. By July 2020, most borders that were closed due to the coronavirus had been reopened.
Regulation of external borders
Participating countries are required to apply strict checks on travellers entering and exiting the Schengen Area. These checks are co-ordinated by the European Union's Frontex agency, and subject to common rules. The details of border controls, surveillance and the conditions under which permission to enter into the Schengen Area may be granted are exhaustively detailed in the Schengen Borders Code.
Temporary restriction on the entry of persons without the right of free movement for non-essential travel
In view of the COVID-19 pandemic, on 16 March 2020 the European Commission issued a recommendation to all EU and Schengen member states to introduce a temporary restriction on the entry of third-country nationals (i.e. travellers who are not EEA/Swiss citizens and family members with the right of free movement) to the Schengen Area for non-essential travel for an initial period of 30 days (with the possible prolongation of this period to be assessed based on further developments). However, third-country nationals who are holders of long-term visas or residence permits or are family members of EEA/Swiss citizens are exempt from this restriction. Further, third-country nationals 'with an essential function or need' (such as healthcare workers, transport personnel, aid workers, military personnel, seasonal agricultural workers), passengers in transit, those travelling 'for imperative family reasons' and those 'in need of international protection or for other humanitarian reasons' are exempt from this restriction. Nevertheless, the European Commission re-iterated that 'coordinated and reinforced health checks' should be carried out on all travellers who are permitted to enter the EU and Schengen Area.
Further, on 30 March 2020, the European Commission published 'Guidance on the implementation of the temporary restriction on non-essential travel to the EU, on the facilitation of transit arrangements for the repatriation of EU citizens, and on the effects on visa policy' in order to provide 'advice and practical instructions'. The Guidance states that member states are permitted to take measures (such as requiring non-nationals to undergo a period of self-isolation if arriving from a territory affected by COVID-19), provided that the same requirements is imposed on its own nationals. The Guidance also clarifies that citizens of the European micro-states (Andorra, Monaco, San Marino and the Vatican City) are exempt from the temporary restriction on the entry of third-country nationals to the European Union and the Schengen Area for non-essential travel. In addition, citizens of Serbia, North Macedonia, Montenegro and Turkey should be permitted entry to the European Union and the Schengen Area if they are stranded abroad in order to facilitate repatriation to their country of origin. Third-country nationals (not covered by one of the exemptions from the temporary restriction of entry for non-essential reasons) who seek to enter the Schengen Area will be refused entry at the external border crossing point and will receive a refusal of entry form (with the reason of refusal marked as "I" (i.e. a threat to public health)), as well a passport stamp cancelled by an indelible cross in black ink and the letter "I" on the right hand side.
Some EU and Schengen member states have gone further than the European Commission recommendation and have restricted the entry of EEA/Swiss citizens to their respective territories for non-essential travel. For example, on 4 April 2020, French Border Police refused entry to a group of EU and British citizens who arrived in Marseille Provence Airport on a private jet from the UK, with the intention of staying in a holiday villa in Cannes.
On 8 April 2020, the European Commission invited EU and Schengen member states to extend the restriction on the entry of third-country nationals for non-essential travel for a further period of 30 days until 15 May 2020. On 8 May 2020, the European Commission again invited member states to extend the restriction for another 30 days until 15 June 2020. On 11 June 2020, the European Commission recommended member states to prolong the restriction on the entry of third-country nationals for non-essential travel until 30 June 2020.
Border checks
All persons crossing external borders—inbound or outbound—are subject to a check by a border guard. The only exception is for regular cross-border commuters (both those with the right of free movement and third-country nationals) who are well known to the border guards: once an initial check has shown that there is no alert on record relating to them in the Schengen Information System or national databases, they can only be subject to occasional 'random' checks, rather than systematic checks every time they cross the border.
Previously, EEA and Swiss citizens, as well as their family members enjoying the right of free movement, were subject only to a 'minimum check' when crossing external borders. This meant that their travel document was subject only to a 'rapid' and 'straightforward' visual inspection and an optional check against databases for lost/stolen travel documents. Consultation of the Schengen Information System and other national databases to ensure that the traveller did not represent a security, public policy or health threat was only permitted on a strictly 'non-systematic' basis where such a threat was 'genuine', 'present' and 'sufficiently serious'. In contrast, other travellers were subject to a 'thorough check'.
However after the November 2015 terrorist attacks in Paris, at a meeting of the Council of the European Union on 20 November 2015, interior ministers from the Member States decided to 'implement immediately the necessary systematic and coordinated checks at external borders, including on individuals enjoying the right of free movement'. Amendments were made to the Schengen Border Code to introduce systematic checks of the travel documents of EEA and Swiss citizens, as well as their family members enjoying the right of free movement, against relevant databases when crossing external borders. The new regime came into force on 7 April 2017.
Where carrying out systematic checks against databases would have a disproportionate impact on the flow of traffic at an external border, such checks may be relaxed if, on the basis of a risk assessment, it is determined that it would not lead to a security risk.[how?]
In 'exceptional' and 'unforeseen' circumstances where waiting times become excessive, external border checks can be relaxed on a temporary basis.[example needed]
Border guards carry out the following procedures when checking travellers who cross external borders:
Procedure | EEA, Swiss citizens and family members with right of free movement | Third-country nationals | |
---|---|---|---|
(on entry) | (on exit) | ||
Checking the traveller's identity based on their travel document | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Checking that the travel document is valid and has not expired | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Checking the travel document for signs of falsification or counterfeiting | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Checking the travel document for signs of falsification or counterfeiting using technical devices (e.g. UV light, magnifiers) | Optional | Optional | Optional |
Checking the authenticity of the data stored on the RFID chip (if the travel document is biometric) | Optional | Optional | Optional |
Checking the travel document against the list of stolen, misappropriated, lost and invalidated documents in the Schengen Information System, Interpol's SLTD database and other national databases | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Consulting the Schengen Information System and other national databases to ensure that the traveller does not represent a threat to public policy, internal security, public health or international relations of any Schengen Member State | Yes | Optional (consultation of databases only 'where necessary') | Yes |
Recording the traveller's entry/exit in a database As of April 2016, only 10 Schengen Member States—Estonia, Finland, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Portugal, Slovakia and Spain—record third-country nationals' entries and exits in their national databases, but data is not exchanged between the national databases of these countries, nor is there a Schengen-wide centralised database tracking entries and exits in all 27 Schengen Member States. Only Poland systematically records the entries and exits of EEA and Swiss citizens who are stopped at the border. | Optional | Optional | Optional |
Stamping the travel document | No | Yes (with specific groups) | Yes (with specific groups) |
Checking that the traveller has the appropriate visa/residence permit (if required) | No | Yes | Optional |
Checking the authenticity of the short-stay visa (if required) and the identity of its holder by consulting the Visa Information System | No | Yes | Optional |
Examining entry and exit stamps in the travel document to ensure that the traveller has not exceeded the maximum duration of authorised stay | No | Yes (with some exceptions) | Optional |
Verifying the traveller's point of departure and destination | No | Yes | No |
Verifying the traveller's purpose of stay | No | Yes (with some exceptions) | No |
Verifying any documents/evidence to support the traveller's purported purpose of stay | No | Optional (with some exceptions) | No |
Verifying that the traveller has sufficient funds for their stay and onward/return journey (or that they are in a position to acquire such means lawfully) | No | Yes (with some exceptions) | No |
As shown by the table above, because many procedures are optional, border guards have discretion in deciding how rigorously they check travellers at external border crossing points. As a result, the length of time taken to perform checks differs between Schengen countries. Under the previous regime (whereby those with the right to freedom of movement were subject only to a 'minimum check'), an entry check for an EEA or Swiss citizen took around five seconds on average in Italy, whilst in Norway, on average it took around 1 minute. The disparities in checks on third-country nationals (who are subject to a more thorough check) are even greater. For example, an entry check for an Annex II national takes around 15 seconds on average in Greece, whilst it takes three to five minutes on average in Slovakia. Similarly, an entry check for an Annex I national on average lasts around 30–60 seconds in the Netherlands, whilst in Latvia, it lasts around two to five minutes on average.
After the new regime came into force on 7 April 2017, significantly longer waiting times were reported at numerous external border crossing points, especially as it was just before the Easter holiday. Travellers entering Slovenia from Croatia (which was not yet part of the Schengen Area) had to wait several hours as Slovenian border guards systematically checked the travel documents of all travellers (including those with the right of free movement) against relevant databases. The Prime Minister of Slovenia, Miro Cerar, acknowledged that the situation was 'unacceptable'. In order to alleviate the long queues, the systematic checking of travel documents of those with the right of free movement against relevant databases was temporarily suspended from the evening of Friday 7 April 2017 until the end of the weekend. However, the following weekend, long queues re-appeared. The Prime Minister of Croatia, Andrej Plenković, criticised the situation, calling it 'unsustainable', and expressed concern about the impact on tourism (which accounts for 18% of Croatia's GDP). The President of Croatia, Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović, sent a formal letter to the European Commission to voice her concern about the effect of the new regime on border checks. At a meeting held on 29 April 2017, the President of the European Commission, Jean-Claude Juncker, Cerar and Plenković agreed that, moving forward, the systematic checking of the travel documents of those with the right of free movement against relevant databases would be suspended at land border crossing points between Croatia and Slovenia if the waiting time exceeds 15 minutes (with 'targeted checks' being carried out instead). Long queues were also reported at external border crossing points in Greece, where the leadership of the Hellenic Police (which is responsible for border checks) decided to suspend, for a period of six months, the systematic checking of travel documents of those with the right of free movement against relevant databases (with the exception of the Kipoi land border crossing point with Turkey, due to security concerns). Greece was particularly affected by the implementation of the new regime as Greek identity cards were not machine-readable at that time, which meant that border guards had to enter the holder's information manually into the computer system to check the relevant databases if a Greek citizen presented an identity card instead of a passport. Similarly, long waiting times were reported at external border crossing points in France and Spain.Finland, Hungary and Italy also issued notifications suspending systematic checks at some external border crossing points. In July 2017, Greece submitted a request to suspend the systematic checking of travel documents of those with the right of free movement against relevant databases for a further period of 18 months, due to 'infrastructure shortcomings and increased traffic at 12 airports across the country'.
When carrying out checks at external borders, border guards are, by law, required to respect the dignity of travellers (particularly in cases involving vulnerable persons) and are forbidden from discriminating against persons based on their sex, racial or ethnic origin, religion or belief, disability, age or sexual orientation.
External border controls are located at roads crossing a border, at airports, at seaports and on board trains. Usually, there is no fence along the land border, but there are exceptions like the Ceuta border fence, and some places at the eastern border. However, surveillance camera systems, some equipped with infrared technology, are located at some more critical spots, for example at the border between Slovakia and Ukraine, where at some points there is a camera every 186 metres (203 yards).
All travellers entering and leaving the Schengen Area by general aviation or on a pleasure boat have to make their first point of entry/final point of departure in an airport/aerodrome or a seaport that is designated as an external border crossing point. By way of derogation, travellers on board a pleasure boat are permitted to make their first port of call at a port that is not designated as an external border crossing point if they notify the port authorities and obtain authorisation from the border guards. In practice, however, this is a loophole hard to check, and large-scale drug smuggling using private boats has been uncovered. Along the southern coast of the Schengen countries in the Mediterranean, coast guards make a substantial effort to prevent private boats from entering without permission.
At many external border crossing points, there are special lanes for EEA and Swiss citizens (as well as their family members) and other lanes for all travellers regardless of nationality. At some external border crossing points, there is a third type of lane for travellers who are Annex II nationals (i.e. non-EEA/Swiss citizens who are exempt from the visa requirement). Although Andorran and Sammarinese citizens are not EEA citizens, they are nonetheless able to use the special lanes designated for EEA and Swiss citizens. Since 1 January 2021, British citizens are no longer permitted to use the EEA/Swiss lanes.
Some external border crossing points can only be used by certain travellers. For example, the border checkpoint in Veľké Slemence, Slovakia (on the border with Ukraine) can only be crossed by pedestrians or cyclists who are EEA, Swiss or Ukrainian citizens. The border checkpoint in Ramoniškiai, Lithuania (on the border with Russia) can only be crossed by residents of Lithuania and Russia; all other travellers (including EEA and Swiss citizens not resident in Lithuania/Russia) cannot use this border checkpoint. Similarly, the border checkpoint of Pededze-Brunishevo, Latvia (on the border with Russia) is only open to Latvian and Russian citizens. The Narva 2 and Saatse border crossing points in Estonia (on the border with Russia) can only be used by residents of Estonia and Russia. The border checkpoint in Połowce-Pieszczatka, Poland (on the border with Belarus) can only be crossed by Polish and Belarusian nationals. In 2016, as a temporary measure for 180 days, the two northernmost border checkpoints of Raja-Jooseppi and Salla on the Finland–Russia border could only be crossed by Finnish, Russian and Belarusian citizens (as well as their family members); all other nationals, including non-Finnish EEA and Swiss citizens, were not permitted to use these border checkpoints. Further, the border crossing points of Haapovaara, Inari, Karttimo, Kurvinen, Leminaho and Parikkala (as well as the railway crossing point of Imatra) are only open to Finnish and Russian citizens.
The additional obligations imposed by European law on national border authorities when it comes to processing travellers who are third-country nationals (e.g. the obligation to stamp their travel documents) should not prevent the development of automated border control systems which are made available to such travellers. As shown by the examples listed above of automated border control systems which have been developed at external border crossing points of the Schengen Area, national border authorities have been able to adapt the design of their automated border control systems to allow third-country nationals to make use of them. One solution is to have a border guard physically positioned next to the automated border gates who can stamp travel documents where required: this approach has been adopted by the Finnish Border Guard at the automated border gates in Helsinki Airport, where eligible users (who are required to receive a passport stamp) include holders of Australian, Canadian, Japanese, New Zealand, South Korean and United States biometric passports, and in the Port of Helsinki, where eligible users (who are required to receive a passport stamp) include Russian citizens, who are required to scan both the biodata page and the visa inside their passport, then to step into the gate for a facial image and fingerprint recognition, and after the gate opens to approach a border officer to have their passport stamped. The Portuguese Serviço de Estrangeiros e Fronteiras has also adopted the practice of positioning a border guard for stamping next to the automated border gates in Lisbon Airport where eligible users (who are required to receive a passport stamp) include holders of Angolan and Brazilian passports and holders of diplomatic/service passports. This approach has also been adopted in Italy, where eligible users of eGates include holders of Australian, Canadian, Israeli, Japanese, New Zealand, Singaporean, South Korean, United States and Vatican biometric passports. A similar but slightly different solution has been adopted by the Dutch Royal Marechaussee at the Privium iris recognition automated border gates at Amsterdam Airport Schiphol (where eligible users include registered EU/EEA/Swiss citizens, US citizens who are Global Entry members, and all nationals who are holders of diplomatic passports), as well as by the German Federal Police at the ABG Plus iris recognition automated border gates at Frankfurt Airport (where eligible users include registered EU/EEA/Swiss citizens and US citizens who are Global Entry members: when eligible third-country nationals use Privium/ABG Plus, after their iris is scanned and verified, a different gate/door/turnstile opens to that for EU/EEA/Swiss citizens and the third-country national user is directed to a lane which leads them to the front of the queue for manual passport checks at immigration desks, where the border guard stamps the user's passport. Another possible solution would be to design the automated border gates to print a paper slip with an entry or exit stamp on it, as well as the user's name and travel document number, whenever the user is a traveller who is subject to the requirement to have their travel document stamped.
Sometimes, external border controls are located on non-Schengen territory. For example, the French Border Police operates border checks at juxtaposed controls on travellers departing the United Kingdom for the Schengen Area before they board their train or ferry at St Pancras International, Ebbsfleet International and Ashford International railway stations, as well as at the Port of Dover and the Eurotunnel Folkestone Terminal.
ETIAS
In November 2016 the European Commission proposed a system for an electronic authorisation of visa-exempt third country nationals called ETIAS (European Travel Information and Authorisation System). Foreign visitors will be required to submit personal data in advance and pay a processing fee (fee is waived for children). The application is to be done over the internet and need to be made a few days before travel. The authorisation will be valid for three years. It is imagined as a system similar to the ESTA system of the United States and the ETA system of Canada. ETIAS is scheduled to enter into operation six months after the EES, in late 2025.
Implementation of the Entry/Exit System (EES)
In 2025, the European Union plans to implement the Entry/Exit System (EES), an automated IT system designed to register travelers from third countries each time they cross an EU external border. This system will replace the traditional passport stamping method, utilizing facial recognition and fingerprint scans to record entries and exits.
Introduction of the European Travel Information and Authorization System (ETIAS)
Starting in 2025, travelers from visa-exempt third countries will be required to obtain travel authorization through the European Travel Information and Authorization System (ETIAS) before entering the Schengen Area. This system aims to enhance security by pre-screening travelers and will involve an online application process with a fee of €7.
ETIAS requirements will, in general, apply to those third country nationals who are not required to have a visa and have no residence permit or similar.
Carrier's responsibility
Schengen rules require that all carriers conveying passengers across the Schengen external border must check, before boarding, that passengers have the correct travel documents and visas required for entry. Carriers that transport third-country nationals without the correct travel documents are imposed with financial penalties and are required to transport those refused entry back to the point of departure. The aim of this measure is to prevent illegal immigration. Further, since immigrants have the right to apply for asylum at border control at ports of entry in the EU, though such applications must be made in person in the country where asylum status is sought, this measure has the effect of preventing prospective asylum seekers from boarding public transportation to the Schengen Area (unless they have already obtained a Schengen visa or are visa-exempt).
Short-stay and transit visas
The rules applicable to short-term entry visas into the Schengen Area are set out in EU regulations which contain two lists: a list of the nationalities (or classes of travel document holder) which require a visa for a short-term stay (the Annex I list) and a list which do not (the Annex II list).
Being listed in the visa-free list will sometimes but not always exempt the listed nationality or class from the requirement to obtain a work permit if they wish to take up employment or self-employed activity during their stay; business trips are not normally considered employment in this sense.
An application for a Schengen visa should be submitted to the embassy or consulate of the country which the traveller intends to visit. If a traveller plans to visit multiple countries in the Schengen Area, the application should be submitted to the embassy or consulate of the main destination. If the main destination cannot be determined, the traveller should apply for the visa at the embassy or consulate of the Schengen member state of first entry. Often, external service providers are contracted by certain diplomatic missions to process, collect and return visa applications.
The standard application fee for a Schengen visa is EUR 80. There is a reduced visa application fee of EUR 40 for children aged 6 to 12. The visa application fee is waived for children under the age of 6. Where an application is submitted to an external service provider, an additional service fee may have to be paid. The visa application fee (and the additional service fee, if applicable) are not refundable regardless of the outcome of the application.
Entry conditions for third-country nationals
A Schengen visa or a visa exemption does not entitle the traveller to enter the Schengen Area, but rather allows the traveller to seek entry at the border crossing point. The Schengen Borders Code lists requirements which third-country nationals must meet to be allowed into the Schengen Area. For this purpose, a third-country national is a person who does not enjoy the right of free movement (i.e. a person who is not an EEA citizen or Swiss, nor a family member of such a person).
The entry requirements for third country nationals who intend to stay in the Schengen Area for not more than 90 days in any 180-day period are as follows:
- The traveller is in possession of a valid travel document or documents authorising them to cross the border (a visa is not considered a travel document in this sense); the acceptance of travel documents for this purpose remains within the domain of the member states;
- The travel document must be valid for at least three months after the intended date of departure from the Schengen Area (although in a justified case of emergency, this obligation may be waived) and must have been issued within the previous 10 years;
- The traveller either possesses a valid visa (if required) or a valid residence permit;
- The traveller can justify the purpose and conditions of the intended stay and has sufficient means of subsistence, both for the duration of the intended stay and for the return to his or her country of origin or transit to a third country into which the traveller is certain to be admitted, or is in a position to acquire such means lawfully;
- The Schengen Information System does not contain a refusal of entry alert concerning the traveller, and
- The traveller is not considered to be a threat to public policy, internal security, public health or the international relations of any of the Schengen states.
However, even if the third-country national does not fulfil the criteria for entry, admission may still be granted:
- On humanitarian grounds
- On grounds of national interests
- On grounds of international obligations
- If the person is not in possession of a visa, but fulfils the criteria for being issued a visa at the border
- If the person holds a residence permit or a re-entry visa issued by a Schengen state
Passport stamp
Certain travellers receive a passport stamp when entering and exiting the Schengen Area. All 29 European countries within the Schengen Area have entry and exit stamps of a uniform design. As of April 2016, at a national level, 11 Schengen countries (Estonia, Finland, Greece, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Portugal, Slovakia and Spain)[excessive citations] have developed computer databases recording entries and exits of third-country nationals (i.e. travellers who are not EU, EEA or Swiss citizens) at external border crossing points. However, on a Schengen-wide level, there is no centralised computer database that tracks entries and exits at all of the external border crossing points of the 29 Schengen countries, nor are entry and exit records from national databases shared between countries. As a result, law enforcement officials continue to rely on checking passport stamps as the primary way to check that travellers who do not have the right of free movement have not exceeded their length of permitted stay in the Schengen Area.
Regulation (EU) 2017/2226 envisages the establishment of an Entry-Exit System (EES) which will record third-country nationals' entries and exits when they cross the external borders of the Schengen Area in a central database, replacing passport stamps. EES had been expected to enter into operation at the end of May 2023, but was delayed until 2025.
There are no systematic immigration checks when travelling between Schengen countries (i.e. crossing the internal borders of the Schengen Area). Passport stamps are never issued when travelling between Schengen countries, even when immigration checks between Schengen countries are temporarily re-introduced.
When travelling to/from a non-Schengen country (i.e. crossing the external borders of the Schengen Area), the rules on stamping travel documents are as follows:
Persons whose travel documents are to be stamped | Persons whose travel documents are not to be stamped |
---|---|
|
|
Border officials are required, by law, to stamp the travel documents of third country nationals who do not qualify for one of the exemptions listed in the right hand column when they cross external borders, even when border controls have been relaxed. However, nationals of Andorra, Monaco, San Marino and Vatican City are exempt from this requirement, as are heads of state, whose visits were announced through diplomatic channels, and holders of local border traffic permits and residence permits issued by a Schengen member state. Certain exemptions also apply to the crews of ships and aircraft.
Exceptionally, if stamping a person's travel document would cause serious difficulties (such as political persecution), border officials can instead issue a sheet of paper detailing the person's name, travel document number and entry date and location. However, in practice, border officials do not always stamp the travel documents of travellers as legally required. If a person who should have received an entry stamp cannot show one either upon request by a law enforcement officer or upon leaving the Schengen Area to a border official, the officer can presume that the person has been staying illegally in the Schengen Area and can expel them, unless the person can demonstrate using credible evidence (such as transport tickets and accommodation receipts) that they have not exceeded their permitted length of stay in the Schengen Area.
Although, according to EU rules, third country nationals who hold residence permits should not have their travel documents stamped, France nevertheless requires third country nationals holding a visa de long séjour valant titre de séjour (a long-stay visa serving additionally as a residence permit for up to one year) to receive a passport stamp upon their first entry to the Schengen Area as a part of the process to validate the visa as a residence permit; without an entry stamp, the process cannot be completed.
Third-country nationals who otherwise fulfil all the criteria for admission into the Schengen area must not be denied entry for the sole reason that there is no remaining empty space in their travel document to affix a stamp; instead, the stamp should be affixed on a separate sheet of paper.
Entry and exit stamps are applied in black ink, except for the red date stamp and a two-digit security code in the middle. The two-digit security code must be changed at least once a month, although some Schengen countries (such as Greece) change security codes every day. The stamps bear the country abbreviation within a circle of stars in the top left hand corner, the name of the entry/exit border crossing point in Latin alphabet at the bottom, and an icon in the top right hand corner to denote the mode of entry/exit. Below the name of the border crossing point is an identifying number – a record is kept of the identity of the border officer to whom a given stamp is assigned at any given time. Entry stamps are rectangular and have an arrow into a square, while exit stamps are rectangular with rounded corners and have an arrow out of a square. The stamps do not indicate any maximum permitted duration of stay.
Border guards are required to ensure the secure storage of passport stamps in locked safes between shifts. Border posts are advised to set out clear responsibilities and instructions for the distribution and use of passport stamps.
According to European Commission recommendations and guidelines, stamps should be affixed in travel documents by border officials in the following manner:
- in chronological order
- in a horizontal position
- in a clear and straight manner (i.e. with enough ink and not over the edge of a page)
- the exit stamp should be affixed in the proximity of the entry stamp
- no stamp should be affixed over another stamp or over the machine readable zone of a visa
- if the travel document contains a single-entry Schengen visa, the stamp should be affixed over the edge of the visa, but without affecting the legibility of the conditions and security features of the visa
- if the travel document contains a multiple-entry Schengen visa, the stamp should be affixed on the page facing the one on which the visa is affixed
If a third-country national is refused entry to the Schengen Area, the border official is required to affix an entry stamp in the travel document, cancel the stamp by an indelible cross in blank ink and write the letter corresponding to the reason for the refusal of entry to the right-hand side of the cancelled stamp.
By contrast, if a border official has affixed a stamp in a travel document by mistake (as opposed to a refusal of entry), the stamp can be annulled by drawing two parallel lines through the top left-hand corner.
- Uniform design of Schengen member states' passport stamps
- Entry stamp for air travel, issued at Sandefjord Airport in Norway
- Entry stamp for rail travel, issued at Nickelsdorf at Austro-Hungarian border before Hungary joined the Schengen Area
- Entry stamp for road travel, issued at Doirani at Greek-North Macedonian border
- Entry stamp for ferry travel, issued at the port of Amsterdam IJmond in Netherlands
- Exit stamp for air travel, issued at Prague Ruzyně Airport in Czech Republic
- Exit stamp for rail travel, issued at Bad Schandau at Czech-German border before the Czech Republic joined the Schengen Area
- Exit stamp for road travel, issued at Korczowa at Polish-Ukrainian border
- Exit stamp for ferry travel, issued at port of Helsinki in Finland
Stays in excess of 90 days
For stays in the Schengen Area as a whole which exceed 90 days, a third-country national will need to hold either a long-stay visa for a period no longer than a year, or a residence permit for longer periods. A long-stay visa is a national visa but is issued in accordance with a uniform format. It entitles the holder to enter the Schengen Area and remain in the issuing state for a period longer than 90 days but no more than one year. If a Schengen state wishes to allow the holder of a long-stay visa to remain there for longer than a year, the state must issue him or her with a residence permit.
The holder of a long-stay visa or a residence permit is entitled to move freely within other states which compose the Schengen Area for a period of up to three months in any half-year. Third-country nationals who are long-term residents in a Schengen state may also acquire the right to move to and settle in another Schengen state without losing their legal status and social benefits.
Asylum seekers who request international protection under the Geneva Convention from a Schengen member state are not issued a residence permit, but are instead issued, within three days of the application being lodged, an authorisation to remain on the territory of the member state while the application is pending or being examined. This means that, whilst their application for refugee status is being processed, asylum seekers are only permitted to remain in the Schengen member state where they have claimed asylum and are not entitled to move freely within other states which compose the Schengen Area. Successful applicants who have been granted international protection by a Schengen member state are issued residence permits which are valid for at least three years and renewable, whilst applicants granted subsidiary protection by a Schengen member state are issued residence permits valid for at least 1-year and renewable, unless there are compelling reasons relating to national security or public order. Family members of beneficiaries of international or subsidiary protection from a Schengen member state are issued residence permits as well, but their validity can be shorter. Applicants who have been granted temporary protection by a Schengen member state (as well as their reunited family members) are issued residence permits valid for the entire period of temporary protection.
However, some third-country nationals are permitted to stay in the Schengen Area for more than 90 days without the need to apply for a long-stay visa. For example, France does not require citizens of Andorra, Monaco, San Marino and the Vatican City to apply for a long-stay visa. In addition, Article 20(2) of the Convention implementing the Schengen Agreement allows for this 'in exceptional circumstances' and for bilateral agreements concluded by individual signatory states with other countries before the Convention entered into force to remain applicable. As a result, for example, New Zealand citizens are permitted to stay for up to 90 days in each of the Schengen countries (Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Iceland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Spain, Sweden and Switzerland) which had already concluded bilateral visa exemption agreements with the New Zealand Government prior to the Convention entering into force without the need to apply for long-stay visas, but if travelling to other Schengen countries the 90 days in a 180-day period time limit applies.[excessive citations]
Entry conditions for family members of EEA and Swiss citizens
Third-country nationals who are family members of EEA and Swiss citizens exercising their right of free movement and who hold a residence card of a family member of a Union citizen issued by their EEA host country can visit another EEA member state or Switzerland without a visa for a short stay of up to three months in each member state. A 'family member' is defined as the spouse/partner, any of their children below age 21 or dependents (including those of the spouse/partner) and dependent parents (including those of the spouse/partner).
Holders of a residence card of a family member of a Union citizen issued by a Schengen member state can travel to another Schengen member state without a visa, regardless of whether they are travelling independently, or accompanying or joining their EEA/Swiss citizen family member. However, holders of a residence card of a family member of a Union citizen issued by Bulgaria, Cyprus, Ireland, and the UK can travel to the Schengen Area without a visa only if they are accompanying or joining their EEA/Swiss citizen family member. British citizens had until 30 June 2021 to apply for the card.
If the non-EEA family member is an Annex I national who presents themself at the border without a residence card of a family member of a Union citizen nor an entry visa, but can show their family ties with the EEA/Swiss citizens by other means, then a visa must be issued at the border free of charge and entry permitted.
However, as of December 2008, the right of entry of family members of EEA/Swiss citizens laid down in Articles 5(2) and 5(4) of Directive 2004/38/EC has been incorrectly transposed into Belgian, Latvian and Swedish law, and not transposed at all by Austria, Denmark, Estonia, Italy, Lithuania, Germany and Slovenia. Five member states do not follow the Directive to the effect that non-EEA family members may still face difficulties (denial of boarding the vessel by the transport company, denial to enter by border police) when travelling to those states using their residence card issued by another EU member state. A visa or other document(s) may still be required.
Local border traffic at external borders
Schengen states which share an external land border with a non-EU member state are authorised by virtue of the EU Regulation 1931/2006 to conclude or maintain bilateral agreements with neighbouring third countries for the purpose of implementing a local border traffic regime. Such agreements define a border area which may extend to a maximum of 50 kilometres (31 mi) on either side of the border, and provide for the issuance of local border traffic permits to residents of the border area. Permits may be used to cross the EU external border within the border area, are not stamped on crossing the border and must display the holder's name and photograph, as well as a statement that its holder is not authorised to move outside the border area and that any abuse shall be subject to penalties.
Permits are issued with a validity period of between one and five years and allow for a stay in the border area of up to three months. Permits may only be issued to lawful residents of the border area who have been resident in the border area for a minimum of one year (or longer if specified by the bilateral agreement). Applicants for a permit have to show that they have legitimate reasons to cross frequently an external land border under the local border traffic regime. Schengen states must keep a central register of the permits issued and have to provide immediate access to the relevant data to other Schengen states.
Holders of local border traffic permits are able to spend up to 3 months every time they enter the border area of the country which has issued the permit (this time limit is far more generous than the "90 days in a 180-day period" normally granted to third-country nationals visiting the Schengen Area).
Before the conclusion of an agreement with a neighbouring country, the Schengen state must receive approval from the European Commission, which has to confirm that the draft agreement is in conformity with the Regulation. The agreement may only be concluded if the neighbouring state grants at least reciprocal rights to EEA and Swiss nationals resident on the Schengen side of the border area, and agrees to the repatriation of individuals found to be abusing the border agreement.
As of June 2017[update] ten local-traffic agreements have come into force.
- Hungary–Ukraine from January 2008.
- Slovakia–Ukraine from September 2008.
- Poland–Ukraine in July 2009.
- Romania–Moldova from October 2010.
- Latvia–Belarus from February 2012.
- Norway–Russia from May 2012.
- Poland–Russia (Kaliningrad Area) from July 2012 (suspended since July 2016)
- Latvia–Russia from June 2013.
- Romania–Ukraine from May 2015.
- An agreement between Croatia–Bosnia and Herzegovina is applied on provisional basis, pending ratification.
On 28 April 2014, Moldova was classified as an 'Annex II' nationality. On 11 June 2017, Ukraine was classified as an 'Annex II' nationality. Therefore, Moldovan and Ukrainian citizens who hold biometric passports no longer require a visa to enter the Schengen Area, thus obviating the need to apply for a local border traffic permit (unless they wish to spend more than 90 days in a 180-day period permitted by the visa exemption, given that local border traffic permit holders are allowed to stay for 3 months in the border area on each entry).
There are or have been plans for Lithuania–Russia, Poland–Belarus, Bulgaria–Serbia and Bulgaria–North Macedonia local border traffic agreements. The agreement between Poland and Belarus had been due to enter into force by 2012, but was delayed by Belarus, with no implementation date set (as of Oct 2012).
In late 2009, Norway began issuing one-year multiple-entry visas, without the usual requirement of having family or a business partner in Norway, called Pomor-Visas, to Russians from Murmansk Oblast, and later to those from Arkhangelsk Oblast. Finland is not planning border permits, but has issued over one million regular visas for Russians in 2011, and many of them multiple-entry visas. The EU was planning to allow up to 5-year validity on multiple-entry visas for Russians.
There is also a similar system for local border traffic permits between Spain and Morocco regarding Ceuta and Melilla. This system is older and was included in the 1991 accession treaty of Spain to the Schengen Area. In this case there are identity checks for anyone travelling to other parts of the Schengen Area (possible by boat and air only). Such checks are not the rule for other local border traffic zones.
Western Balkan states
Citizens of Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, Montenegro, North Macedonia, and Serbia can enter the Schengen Area without a visa. On 30 November 2009, the EU Council of Ministers for Interior and Justice abolished visa requirements for citizens of Montenegro, North Macedonia, and Serbia, while on 8 November 2010 it did the same for Albania and Bosnia and Herzegovina. The former took effect on 19 December 2009, and the latter on 15 December 2010.
Visa liberalisation negotiations between the EU and the Western Balkans (excluding Kosovo) were launched in the first half of 2008, and ended in 2009 (for Montenegro, North Macedonia, and Serbia) and 2010 (for Albania and Bosnia and Herzegovina). Before visas were fully abolished, the Western Balkan countries (Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, North Macedonia, and Serbia) had signed "visa facilitation agreements" with the Schengen states in 2008. The visa facilitation agreements were, at the time, supposed to shorten waiting periods, lower visa fees (including free visas for certain categories of travellers), and reduce paperwork. In practice, however, the new procedures turned out to be longer, more cumbersome, more expensive, and many people complained that it was easier to obtain visas before the facilitation agreements entered into force.
The European Commission launched a visa liberalisation dialogue with Kosovo on 19 January 2012. In June 2012, the Commission handed over a roadmap on visa liberalisation to the Kosovo authorities, which identified the legislation and institutional measures that Kosovo needed to adopt and implement to advance towards visa liberalisation. On 4 May 2016, the European Commission proposed visa-free travel for the citizens of Kosovo. The European Commission has proposed to the Council of the European Union and the European Parliament to lift the visa requirements for the people of Kosovo by transferring Kosovo to the visa-free list for short-stays in the Schengen Area. The EU approved the visa exemption for nationals of Kosovo, effective from 1 January 2024.
National security risk
Hungary allows entry to the Schengen Area for persons from countries such as Belarus and Russia with limited security screening, resulting in a national security risk for the Schengen Area.
Police and judicial co-operation
To counter the potentially aggravating effects of the abolition of border controls on undocumented immigration and cross-border crime, the Schengen acquis contains compensatory police and judicial measures. Chief among these is the Schengen Information System (SIS), a database operated by all EU and Schengen states and which by January 2010 contained in excess of 30 million entries and by January 2014 contained in excess of 50 million entries, according to a document published in June 2015 by the Council of the European Union. Around 1 million of the entries relate to persons, 72% of which were not allowed to enter and stay in the Schengen Area. Only 7% of persons listed on the SIS database were missing persons.
The vast majority of data entries on the SIS, around 49 million, concern lost or stolen objects. The European Council reports that in 2013 an average of 43 stolen vehicles a day were detected by authorities using the SIS database.
A list of EU authorities with access to SIS is published annually in the Official Journal of the European Union. As at 24 June 2015, 235 authorities can use the SIS database. The SIS database is operationally managed by eu-LISA.
The Schengen Agreement also allows police officers from one participating state to follow suspects across borders both in hot pursuit and to continue observation operations, and for enhanced mutual assistance in criminal matters.
The Schengen Convention also contained measures intended to streamline extradition between participating countries however these have now been subsumed into the European Arrest Warrant system.
Legal basis
Provisions in the treaties of the European Union
The legal basis for Schengen in the treaties of the European Union has been inserted in the Treaty establishing the European Community through Article 2, point 15 of the Treaty of Amsterdam. This inserted a new title named "Visas, asylum, immigration and other policies related to free movement of persons" into the treaty, currently numbered as Title IV, and comprising articles 61 to 69. The Treaty of Lisbon substantially amends the provisions of the articles in the title, renames the title to "Area of freedom, security and justice" and divides it into five chapters, called "General provisions", "Policies on border checks, asylum and immigration", "Judicial cooperation in civil matters", "Judicial cooperation in criminal matters", and "Police cooperation".
The Schengen Agreement and the Schengen Convention
The Schengen Area originally had its legal basis outside the then European Economic Community, having been established by a sub-set of member states of the Community using two international agreements:
- The 1985 Schengen Agreement – Agreement between the Governments of the States of the Benelux Economic Union, the Federal Republic of Germany and the French Republic on the gradual abolition of checks at their common borders.
- The 1990 Schengen Convention – Convention implementing the Schengen Agreement of 14 June 1985 between the Governments of the States of the Benelux Economic Union, the Federal Republic of Germany and the French Republic on the gradual abolition of checks at their common borders.
On being incorporated into the main body of European Union law by the Amsterdam Treaty, the Schengen Agreement and Convention were published in the Official Journal of the European Communities by a decision of the Council of Ministers. As a result, the Agreement and Convention can be amended by regulations.
See also
- Open Balkan – Economic zone formed by a regional organization in Southeastern Europe
- Central America-4 Border Control Agreement – Boundary treaty in Central America
- Common Travel Area – Open borders area comprising the United Kingdom, Ireland, the Isle of Man, and the Channel Islands
- eu-LISA – Agency of the European Union
- 2015 European migrant crisis – 2010s mass immigration crisis in the European Union
- FADO – European image-archiving system for identity documents
- Mechanism for Cooperation and Verification – EU system for commitment compliance
- Nordic Passport Union – Nordic ease-of-travel agreement
- Prüm Convention – Law enforcement treaty in part of Europe
- Public Register of Travel and Identity Documents Online – Online repository of security features in travel documents
- Trans-Tasman Travel Arrangement – Arrangement between Australia and New Zealand
- Compact of Free Association – US-Micronesia-Marshall Islands-Palau agreements
- Southern Common Market – South American economic agreement
Notes
- Denmark's participation in the Schengen acquis is based on an intergovernmental basis rather than EU law due to a treaty opt-out.
- Not an EU member
- The United Kingdom, the administering power, considers that the area of Gibraltar is 6.8 km2 (2.6 sq mi), while for Spain it is 6.7 km2 (2.6 sq mi). However, the various extensions using land reclaimed from the sea have in practice increased it to 6.8 km2 (2.6 sq mi).
References
- "World Economic Outlook Database, October 2023". IMF.org. International Monetary Fund. Archived from the original on 31 March 2024. Retrieved 31 March 2024.
- "Cyprus Aims for Schengen Area Accession by End of 2025". Schengen News. 14 January 2025.
- "Cyprus Prepares to Join Schengen Zone, Boosting Tourism and Security". The National Herald. 14 January 2025.
- "Schengener Übereinkommen". auswaertiges-amt.de (in German). German Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Archived from the original on 2 June 2024. Retrieved 2 June 2024.
- "Tourist, Student and Work visa to Europe". Swift Tourism. 2010. Archived from the original on 5 September 2017. Retrieved 14 September 2011.
- "Schengen Area". European Commission. 13 February 2025.
- European Parliamentary Research Service (March 2016). "The economic impact of suspending Schengen" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 23 December 2022. Retrieved 15 June 2017.
- European Council on Foreign Relations (2016). "The Future of Schengen". Archived from the original on 26 June 2017. Retrieved 15 June 2017.
- "Schengen's economic impact: Putting up barriers". The Economist. 6 February 2016. Archived from the original on 15 May 2018. Retrieved 15 June 2017.
- Felbermayr G, Gröschl J, Steinwachs T (27 April 2016). "Trade costs of border controls in the Schengen area". Centre for Economic Policy Research. Archived from the original on 25 May 2022. Retrieved 15 June 2017. See also: Felbermayr G, Gröschl J, Steinwachs T (March 2017). "The Trade Effect of Border Controls: Evidence from the European Schengen Agreement" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 20 October 2017. Retrieved 15 June 2017.
- "The refugee crisis: Fixing Schengen is not enough". Archived from the original on 15 December 2018. Retrieved 14 December 2018.
- Fortress Europe, BBC World Service, archived from the original on 17 January 2019, retrieved 4 December 2012
- Schengen area by Latvian Law Firm, Baltic Legal, archived from the original on 31 March 2019, retrieved 19 September 2013
- "The Schengen Area" (PDF). European Commission. Archived (PDF) from the original on 7 August 2017. Retrieved 15 September 2011.
- Owen, Nora (14 March 1995). "Dáil Debates volume 450 column 1171". Archived from the original on 7 June 2011.; O'Donoghue, John (9 March 1999). "Dáil Debates volume 501 column 1506".[permanent dead link ]; "Declaration by Ireland on Article 3 of the Protocol on the position of the United Kingdom and Ireland" attached to the Treaty of Amsterdam.
- This terminology is, for example, used in the Final Act of the Agreement concluded by the Council of the European Union and the Republic of Iceland and the Kingdom of Norway concerning the latters' association with the implementation, application and development of the Schengen acquis Archived 22 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine.
- "Schengen area: Controls at air and sea borders with Bulgaria and Romania will be lifted – European Commission". home-affairs.ec.europa.eu. Archived from the original on 19 January 2024. Retrieved 19 January 2024.
- "Press corner". Archived from the original on 29 February 2024. Retrieved 31 December 2023.
- "Schengen: Council decides to lift land border controls with Bulgaria and Romania". Consilium. Archived from the original on 12 December 2024. Retrieved 12 December 2024.
- "Moment of relief as Romania and Bulgaria join EU border-free zone". BBC. 12 December 2024. Archived from the original on 22 December 2024. Retrieved 4 January 2025.
- "Romania, Bulgaria join borderless Schengen zone after 13-year wait". Al Jazeera. 1 January 2025. Archived from the original on 3 January 2025. Retrieved 4 January 2025.
- "Bulgaria and Romania to join Schengen area starting with air and sea borders: Commission welcomes landmark Council decision". European Commission – European Commission. Archived from the original on 29 February 2024. Retrieved 31 December 2023.
- "Schengen zone: Delay for Bulgaria and Romania to join". British Broadcasting Corporation. 9 June 2011. Archived from the original on 10 June 2011. Retrieved 9 June 2011.
- Castle, Stephen (22 September 2011). "Europe Denies 2 Nations Entry to Travel Zone". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 24 September 2011. Retrieved 23 September 2011.
- Robinson, Frances (22 September 2011). "Bulgaria, Romania Blocked From Travel Zone". The Wall Street Journal. Archived from the original on 26 March 2023. Retrieved 25 September 2011.
- "Romania tells EU: 'We are ready for Schengen when you are'". euractiv.com. 5 December 2013. Archived from the original on 23 January 2016. Retrieved 31 July 2014.
- "Nu intrăm în Schengen. Austria și Olanda au votat împotriva noastră". Digi24 (in Romanian). Archived from the original on 8 December 2022. Retrieved 8 December 2022.
- "Ministrul austriac de Interne: "Are sens să includem Croația și să nu includem acum Bulgaria și România" în Schengen". Digi24 (in Romanian). 3 December 2022. Archived from the original on 3 December 2022. Retrieved 3 December 2022.
- "Austria rejects EC's call to allow Romania, Bulgaria into Schengen". 14 September 2023. Archived from the original on 6 October 2023. Retrieved 2 October 2023.
- "Joint Hungarian, Austrian, Romanian and Bulgarian Declaration". Joint Hungarian, Austrian, Romanian and Bulgarian Declaration. 22 November 2024. Archived from the original on 1 December 2024. Retrieved 28 November 2024.
- "List of non-Schengen countries that can be visited with a Schengen visa". YOYO TRAVELS, Dubai. 14 January 2021. Archived from the original on 24 April 2023. Retrieved 24 April 2023.
- "Travel to Andorra". Govern d'Andorra. Archived from the original on 18 May 2023. Retrieved 24 April 2023.
- "Andorra and the Schengen Area". Andorra Resorts. 8 March 2022. Archived from the original on 29 April 2023. Retrieved 24 April 2023.
- "World Population Prospects 2022". United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
- "World Population Prospects 2022: Demographic indicators by region, subregion and country, annually for 1950-2100" (XSLX) ("Total Population, as of 1 July (thousands)"). United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
- "Protocol on the accession of the Government of the Republic of Austria to the Agreement between the Governments of the Member States of the Benelux Economic Union, the Federal Republic of Germany and the French Republic on the gradual abolition of controls at their common borders, signed at Schengen on 14 June 1985, as amended by the Protocols of 27 November 1990, 25 June 1991 and 6 November 1992 on the accession of the Governments of the Italian Republic, the Kingdom of Spain and the Portuguese Republic and the Hellenic Republic, respectively". Government of the Netherlands. Archived from the original on 31 March 2019. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
- "Beschluß des Exekutivausschusses zur Inkraftsetzung des Schengener Durchführungsübereinkommens in Österreich" [Resolution of the Executive Committee on the implementation of the Schengen Convention in Austria] (in German). 7 October 1997. Archived from the original on 1 April 2019. Retrieved 1 November 2014.
- "Council Decision of 20 May 1999 concerning the definition of the Schengen acquis for the purpose of determining, in conformity with the relevant provisions of the Treaty establishing the European Community and the Treaty on European Union, the legal basis for each of the provisions or decisions which constitute the acquis". Official Journal of the European Union. L (176/1). 10 July 1999. Archived from the original on 13 January 2016. Retrieved 1 November 2014.
- "Agreement between the Governments of the States of the Benelux Economic Union, the Federal Republic of Germany and the French Republic on the Gradual Abolition of Checks at their Common Borders". Government of the Netherlands. Archived from the original on 1 April 2019. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
- "Decision of the Executive Committee of 22 December 1994 on bringing into force the Convention implementing the Schengen Agreement of 19 June 1990". Official Journal of the European Union. L (239/130). 22 December 1994. Archived from the original on 9 April 2016. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
- "Treaty between the Kingdom of Belgium, the Czech Republic, the Kingdom of Denmark, the Federal Republic of Germany, the Republic of Estonia, the Hellenic Republic, the Kingdom of Spain, the French Republic, Ireland, the Italian Republic, the Republic of Cyprus, the Republic of Latvia, the Republic of Lithuania, the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, the Republic of Hungary, the Republic of Malta, the Kingdom of the Netherlands, the Republic of Austria, the Republic of Poland, the Portuguese Republic, the Republic of Slovenia, the Slovak Republic, the Republic of Finland, the Kingdom of Sweden, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (Member States of the European Union) and the Republic of Bulgaria and Romania, concerning the Accession of the Republic of Bulgaria and Romania to the European Union (Deposited with the Government of the Italian Republic)". Council of the European Union. Archived from the original on 30 October 2023. Retrieved 17 January 2019.
- "Council Decision (EU) 2024/210 of 30 December 2023 on the full application of the provisions of the Schengen acquis in the Republic of Bulgaria and Romania". Official Journal of the European Union. L (2024/210). 4 January 2024. Archived from the original on 4 January 2024. Retrieved 3 January 2024.
- "Council Decision (EU) 2024/3212 of 12 December 2024 setting the date for the lifting of checks on persons at internal land borders with and between the Republic of Bulgaria and Romania". Official Journal of the European Union. L (2024/3212). 23 December 2024. Retrieved 1 January 2025.
- "TREATY CONCERNING THE ACCESSION OF THE REPUBLIC OF CROATIA TO THE EUROPEAN UNION". EU. Archived from the original on 9 December 2022. Retrieved 9 December 2022.
- "Council Decision (EU) 2022/2451 of 8 December 2022 on the full application of the provisions of the Schengen acquis in the Republic of Croatia". Official Journal of the European Union. L (320/41). 14 December 2022. Archived from the original on 16 December 2022. Retrieved 15 December 2022.
- "Schengen area: Council decides to lift border controls with Croatia". EU. Archived from the original on 9 December 2022. Retrieved 9 December 2022.
- "Treaty between the Kingdom of Belgium, the Kingdom of Denmark, the Federal Republic of Germany, the Hellenic Republic, the Kingdom of Spain, the French Republic, Ireland, the Italian Republic, the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, the Kingdom of the Netherlands, the Republic of Austria, the Portuguese Republic, the Republic of Finland, the Kingdom of Sweden, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (Member States of the European Union) and the Czech Republic, the Republic of Estonia, the Republic of Cyprus, the Republic of Latvia, the Republic of Lithuania, the Republic of Hungary, the Republic of Malta, the Republic of Poland, the Republic of Slovenia, the Slovak Republic concerning the accession of the Czech Republic, the Republic of Estonia, the Republic of Cyprus, the Republic of Latvia, the Republic of Lithuania, the Republic of Hungary, the Republic of Malta, the Republic of Poland, the Republic of Slovenia and the Slovak Republic to the European Union (Deposited with the Government of the Italian Republic)". Council of the European Union. Retrieved 17 January 2019.
- "COUNCIL DECISION of 6 December 2007 on the full application of the provisions of the Schengen acquis in the Czech Republic, the Republic of Estonia, the Republic of Latvia, the Republic of Lithuania, the Republic of Hungary, the Republic of Malta, the Republic of Poland, the Republic of Slovenia and the Slovak Republic". Official Journal of the European Union. L (323/34). 8 December 2007. Archived from the original on 13 January 2016. Retrieved 27 October 2014.
- "The final step of Schengen enlargement—controls at internal air borders to be abolished in late March". Slovenia's EU Presidency. 25 March 2008. Archived from the original on 22 July 2011. Retrieved 7 February 2009.
- "EUR-Lex – 42000A0922(08) – EN – EUR-Lex". eur-lex.europa.eu.
- "Schengen and Tourists". Government of Greenland. Archived from the original on 25 July 2017.
- "Visa and Work Permit". Government of the Faroe Islands. Archived from the original on 24 September 2016. Retrieved 14 June 2017.
- "General Information on Schengen Short-Term Visas". Royal Danish Embassy in London. 4 June 2009. Archived from the original on 10 January 2010. Retrieved 1 February 2010.
- "Protocol on the accession of the Kingdom of Denmark to the Agreement on the gradual abolition of controls at the contracting parties' common borders, signed at Schengen on 14 June 1985". Government of the Netherlands. Archived from the original on 1 April 2019. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
- "COUNCIL DECISION of 1 December 2000 on the application of the Schengen acquis in Denmark, Finland and Sweden, and in Iceland and Norway". Official Journal of the European Union. L (309/24). 9 December 2000. Archived from the original on 13 January 2016. Retrieved 27 October 2014.
- "Protocol on the accession of the Government of the Republic of Finland to the Agreement on the gradual abolition of controls at the contracting parties' common borders, signed at Schengen on 14 June 1985". Government of the Netherlands. Archived from the original on 2 January 2019. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
- "Doubles contrôles aux frontières dans les aéroports de la capitale pour les Français des Antilles" [Double border controls at the capital's airports for French people from the West Indies] (in French). Senate of France. 20 September 2018. Archived from the original on 20 September 2020. Retrieved 15 March 2020.
- "Vertrag zwischen der Schweizerischen Eidgenossenschaft und der Bundesrepublik Deutschland über die Einbeziehung der Gemeinde Büsingen am Hochrhein in das schweizerische Zollgebiet" [Treaty between the Swiss Confederation and the Federal Republic of Germany regarding the inclusion of the municipality of Büsingen am Hochrhein in the Swiss customs territory] (in German). Fedlex. 3 September 1998. Archived from the original on 7 March 2021. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
Art. 16 Im Verkehr zwischen Büsingen und der Schweiz ist ein Grenzübertrittspapier nicht erforderlich. Eine Grenzabfertigung findet nicht statt
[In traffic between Büsingen and Switzerland a document valid for border crossing is not required. There is no border control.] - "EUR-Lex – 42000A0922(06) – EN". EUR-Lex. Europa. Archived from the original on 16 November 2022. Retrieved 5 January 2023.
- Bonet Navarro, Jaime (2005). "El estatuto especial del Monte Athos ante la tradición religiosa. El derecho eclesiástico griego y el derecho comunitario europeo" [The special status of Mount Athos before the religious tradition. Greek ecclesiastical law and European community law]. Boletín de la Facultad de Derecho (in Spanish). UNED. Archived from the original on 2 July 2020. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
- "The Constitution of Greece" (PDF). Legislation online. 27 May 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 January 2021. Retrieved 23 January 2021.
Regime of Aghion Oros (Mount Athos) Article 105
- "Protocol on the accession of the Government of the Hellenic Republic to the Agreement between the Governments of the Member States of the Benelux Economic Union, the Federal Republic of Germany and the French Republic on the gradual abolition of controls at their common borders, signed at Schengen on 14 June 1985, as amended by the Protocol signed at Paris on 27 November 1990 on the accession of the Government of the Italian Republic and by the Protocols signed at Bonn on 25 June 1991 on the accession of the Governments of the Kingdom of Spain and the Portuguese Republic". Government of the Netherlands. Archived from the original on 2 January 2019. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
- "COUNCIL DECISION of 13 December 1999 on the full application of the Schengen acquis in Greece". Official Journal of the European Union. L (327/58). 9 December 2000. Archived from the original on 13 January 2016. Retrieved 27 October 2014.
- "Cooperation agreement between the Kingdom of Belgium, the Federal Republic of Germany, the French Republic, the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, the Kingdom of the Netherlands, the Italian Republic, the Kingdom of Spain, the Portuguese Republic, the Hellenic Republic, the Republic of Austria, the Kingdom of Denmark, the Republic of Finland, the Kingdom of Sweden, i.e. the Contracting Parties to the Schengen Agreement and to the Schengen Convention, and the Republic of Iceland and the Kingdom of Norway, on the gradual abolition of controls at their common borders". Government of the Netherlands. Archived from the original on 1 April 2019. Retrieved 1 November 2014.
- "Agreement with the Republic of Iceland and the Kingdom of Norway concerning the latters' association with the implementation, application and development of the Schengen acquis". Council of the European Union. Archived from the original on 20 October 2017. Retrieved 1 November 2014.
- "Agreement concluded by the Council of the European Union and the Republic of Iceland and the Kingdom of Norway concerning the latters' association with the implementation, application and development of the Schengen acquis". Official Journal of the European Union. L (176/36). 10 July 1999. Archived from the original on 22 February 2014. Retrieved 1 November 2014.
- "Protocol on the accession of the Government of the Italian Republic to the Agreement between the Governments of the Member States of the Benelux Economic Union, the Federal Republic of Germany and the French Republic on the gradual abolition of controls at their common borders, signed at Schengen on 14 June 1985". Government of the Netherlands. Archived from the original on 2 January 2019. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
- "Resolución de 26 de mayo de 1998, de la Secretaría General Técnica del Ministerio de Asuntos Exteriores". 10 July 1997. Archived from the original on 20 October 2017. Retrieved 1 November 2014.
- "Protocol between the European Union, the European Community, the Swiss Confederation and the Principality of Liechtenstein on the accession of the Principality of Liechtenstein to the Agreement between th
The Schengen Area English ˈ ʃ ɛ ŋ en SHENG en Luxembourgish ˈʃaeŋen encompasses 29 European countries that have officially abolished border controls at their common borders As an element within the wider area of freedom security and justice AFSJ policy of the European Union EU it mostly functions as a single jurisdiction under a common visa policy for international travel purposes The area is named after the 1985 Schengen Agreement and the 1990 Schengen Convention both signed in Schengen Luxembourg Schengen AreaMap of the Schengen Area Schengen Area Countries with open borders to the Schengen area Member of the EU committed by treaty to join the Schengen Area in the futureTypeOpen border area of the European UnionMembers29 states 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 SwitzerlandEstablishment26 March 1995Area Total4 595 131 km2 1 774 190 sq mi Population 2021 estimate453 324 255 Density98 7 km2 255 6 sq mi GDP PPP 2023 estimate Total 25 926 trillion Per capita 56 997GDP nominal 2023 estimate Total 19 213 trillion Per capita 42 237 Of the 27 EU member states 25 are members of the Schengen Area Cyprus and Ireland are the only EU member states that are not part of the Schengen Area Cyprus aims to become part of the Schengen Area by the end of 2025 The country is committed by treaty to join in the future but its participation was complicated due to its prevailing geopolitical situation since the invasion and occupation of Northern Cyprus by Turkey since 1974 Ireland maintains an opt out and operates its own visa policy In addition to the member states of the European Union all member states of the European Free Trade Association namely Iceland Liechtenstein Norway and Switzerland have signed association agreements with the EU to be part of the Schengen Area Moreover the territories of four microstates Andorra Monaco San Marino and Vatican City are de facto included in the Schengen Area due to their small size and difficulty of maintaining active border controls The Schengen Area has a population of more than 450 million people and an area of about 4 595 000 km2 1 774 000 sq mi About 1 7 million people commute to work across an internal European border each day and in some regions these international commuters constitute up to a third of the workforce In 2015 there were 1 3 billion crossings of Schengen borders in total 57 million crossings were due to the transport of goods by road with a value of 2 8 trillion The decrease in the cost of trade due to Schengen varies from 0 42 to 1 59 depending on geography trade partners and other factors Countries outside of the Schengen Area also benefit States in the Schengen Area have strengthened border controls with non Schengen countries HistoryEuropean borders prior to Schengen Before World War I most countries of the world including Europe had lax border policies facilitating such educational trips as the Grand Tour amongst the wealthy Visas became commonplace during the interwar period as did border controls After World War II however customs unions arose between various European countries The Nordic countries allowed free movement and residence between them in 1954 and the countries of Benelux opened their mutual borders in 1960 This reflected a greater trend towards European integration the European Communities EC the predecessor of the EU were established in the 1950s for economic cooperation though they did not deal with border control issues Schengen Agreement The first move towards the abolition of border controls between EC member states took place on 14 June 1985 with the signing of the Schengen Agreement by five EEC members the Benelux countries as well as France and West Germany of the then ten EEC member states These five countries entered into the Schengen Agreement separately from the European Communities because consensus could not be reached among all EEC member states The Agreement was supplemented in 1990 by the Schengen Convention which proposed the abolition of internal border controls and a common visa policy The Agreements and the rules adopted under them continued to be separate from the EC structures and led to the creation of the Schengen Area on 26 March 1995 As more EU member states signed the Schengen Agreement consensus was reached on absorbing it into the procedures of the EU The Agreement and its related conventions were incorporated into the mainstream of European Union law by the Amsterdam Treaty in 1997 which came into effect in 1999 A consequence of the Agreement being part of European law is that any amendment or regulation is made within its processes in which the non EU members are not participants The UK the Crown Dependencies and the Republic of Ireland have operated a Common Travel Area CTA since 1923 with passport free travel and freedom of movement with each other but the UK would not abolish border controls with any other countries and therefore opted out of the Agreement While not signing the Schengen Treaty the Republic of Ireland has always looked more favourably on joining but has not done so in order to maintain the CTA and its open border with Northern Ireland Common Schengen Visa Policy The common visa policy allows nationals of certain countries to enter the Schengen Area via air land or sea without a visa for stays of up to 90 days within a 180 day period Nationals of certain other countries are required to have a visa either upon arrival or in transit Current membersAT BE HR CZ DK EE FI FR DE GR HU IT LV LT LU MT NL PL PT SK SI ES SE VA BG RO IS LI NO CH AD MC SM CY IE UK Schengen Area EU Schengen Area non EU Working to implement later EU Common Travel Area De facto Schengen participation view Azores Madeira and Canary Islands are also in the Schengen Area This is a clickable map The Schengen Area consists of 29 countries including four which are not members of the European Union Iceland Liechtenstein Norway and Switzerland Iceland and Norway are part of the Nordic Passport Union and are officially classified as states associated with the Schengen activities of the European Union Switzerland was allowed to participate in the same manner in 2008 and Liechtenstein in 2011 Romania and Bulgaria are the newest members of the Schengen Area with border controls lifted for air and sea travel on 31 March 2024 and land border controls lifted effective 1 January 2025 more than 17 years after they acceded to the European Union In 2011 the European Commission concluded that the two countries had fulfilled all technical accession criteria and their participation was approved by the European Parliament However this was rejected by the Council of Ministers with some countries such as Denmark and Finland citing concerns about shortcomings in anti corruption measures and in the fight against organised crime The Netherlands conditioned approval for joining the Schengen Area on positive reports under the Mechanism for Cooperation and Verification Austria was the last country to end their veto after series of negotiations to address concerns that the countries were a major transit route for illegal immigration to the country De facto the Schengen Area also includes four European micro states Andorra Monaco San Marino and the Vatican City that maintain open or semi open borders with other Schengen member countries Ireland negotiated opt outs from Schengen and continues to operate border controls with other EU member states while at the same time being part of the open border Common Travel Area with the United Kingdom a former EU member that had held a similar opt out and the Crown Dependencies Summary table Members of the Schengen Area State Area km2 Population 2021 Date signed Date of first implementation Austria 83 871 8 922 082 28 April 1995 1 December 1997 Belgium 30 528 11 611 419 14 June 1985 26 March 1995 Bulgaria 110 994 6 885 868 25 April 2005 31 March 2024 Croatia 56 594 4 060 135 9 December 2011 1 January 2023 Czech Republic 78 866 10 510 751 16 April 2003 21 December 2007 Denmark excluding Greenland and the Faroe Islands 43 094 5 854 240 19 December 1996 25 March 2001 Estonia 45 338 1 328 701 16 April 2003 21 December 2007 Finland including Aland 338 145 5 535 992 19 December 1996 25 March 2001 France excluding Overseas France 551 695 64 531 444 14 June 1985 26 March 1995 Germany including Busingen am Hochrhein 357 022 83 408 554 14 June 1985 26 March 1995 Greece including Mount Athos 131 990 10 445 365 6 November 1992 1 January 2000 Hungary 93 030 9 709 786 16 April 2003 21 December 2007 Iceland 103 000 370 335 19 December 1996 18 May 1999 25 March 2001 Italy 301 318 59 240 329 27 November 1990 26 October 1997 Latvia 64 589 1 873 919 16 April 2003 21 December 2007 Liechtenstein 160 39 039 28 February 2008 19 December 2011 Lithuania 65 300 2 786 651 16 April 2003 21 December 2007 Luxembourg 2 586 639 321 14 June 1985 26 March 1995 Malta 316 526 748 16 April 2003 21 December 2007 Netherlands excluding Dutch Caribbean 41 526 17 501 696 14 June 1985 26 March 1995 Norway excluding overseas territories and dependencies 385 155 5 403 021 19 December 1996 18 May 1999 25 March 2001 Poland 312 683 38 307 726 16 April 2003 21 December 2007 Portugal including Azores and Madeira 92 391 10 290 103 25 June 1991 26 March 1995 Romania 238 391 19 328 560 25 April 2005 31 March 2024 Slovakia 49 037 5 447 622 16 April 2003 21 December 2007 Slovenia 20 273 2 119 410 16 April 2003 21 December 2007 Spain including Canary Islands special provisions for Ceuta and Melilla 505 990 47 486 935 25 June 1991 26 March 1995 Sweden 449 964 10 467 097 19 December 1996 25 March 2001 Switzerland 41 285 8 691 406 26 October 2004 12 December 2008 Schengen Area 4 595 131 453 234 255 14 June 1985 26 March 1995States which are not members of the Schengen Area but which have open or semi open borders with the area State Area km2 Population 2021 Andorra 467 63 79 034 Monaco 2 02 36 686 San Marino 61 2 33 745 Vatican City 0 49 511 Notes The original agreement a subsequent protocol extending the agreement to the state an agreement on accession to the EU or agreement on association with the Schengen acquis Of the provisions related to the elimination of border controls In some cases the provisions related to the Schengen Information System were applied earlier The elimination of border controls took place from 1 December 1997 to 31 March 1998 For air and sea borders 1 January 2025 for land borders For land and sea borders 26 March 2023 for air borders For land and sea borders 30 March 2008 for air borders Greenland and the Faroe Islands are not included in the Schengen Area However persons travelling between the Faroe Islands Greenland and the Schengen Area are not subject to border checks The list of countries whose citizens require a visa for Greenland or the Faroe Islands is the same as for the Schengen Area but a Schengen visa will not allow the holder access to either territory only a Danish visa stamped with either Valid for the Faroe Islands or Valid for Greenland or both The overseas departments and collectivities of France are not part of the Schengen Area However when travelling by air from metropolitan France directly to French Guiana Guadeloupe Martinique Mayotte and Reunion border checks by the French Border Police only take place at the departure airport not at the arrival airport where passengers walk past the passport control booths which will be unstaffed This arrangement does not however apply to direct flights from other Schengen member states such as the past Charleroi Guadeloupe and Charleroi Martinique flights by Air Belgium On the other hand passengers flying from French Guiana Guadeloupe Martinique Mayotte and Reunion directly to metropolitan France have to undergo border checks by the French Border Police both on departure and on arrival an arrangement known as double controle The Schengen Agreement and Schengen convention were both signed by West Germany However they entered into force after German reunification and so also applied to the former East Germany from the same date For Busingen am Hochrhein since 12 December 2008 According to a legally non binding declaration attached to the Greek accession agreement to the Schengen convention the special status according to the Greek constitution of Mount Athos has to be taken into account in the application and subsequent preparation of the Schengen acquis The elimination of border controls took place from 1 January to 26 March 2000 Greece had no land borders with any other country in the Schengen area until 1 January 2025 when Bulgaria eliminated land border controls with other Schengen states EFTA state which is outside the EU that is associated with the Schengen activities of the EU and where the Schengen rules apply A second agreement which replaced the first was signed with Iceland and Norway following the incorporation of the Schengen Agreement into EU law with the Treaty of Amsterdam of 1997 The elimination of border controls took place from 26 October 1997 to 31 March 1998 The full Schengen acquis applies to all Spanish territories but there are border checks on departure from Ceuta and Melilla to Peninsular Spain or other Schengen countries because of specific arrangements for visa exemptions for Moroccan nationals resident in the provinces of Tetuan and Nador For sea and land borders since 29 March 2009 also for air borders Potential enlargementAn Euler diagram showing the relationships between various multinational European organisations and agreements vte The procedure to enter the Schengen Area is that European Commission evaluates certain criteria These criteria include border control legislation infrastructure and organisation personal data protection visas deportations police cooperation and more After a positive evaluation the Schengen members of the Council of the European Union decides unanimously together with the European Parliament to accept the new member Cyprus Cyprus as EU member state is committed by its Treaties of Accession to join the Schengen Area eventually However before fully implementing the Schengen rules the state must have its preparedness assessed in four areas air borders visas police cooperation and personal data protection This evaluation process involves a questionnaire and visits by EU experts to selected institutions and workplaces in the country under assessment Although Cyprus which joined the EU on 1 May 2004 is legally bound to join the Schengen Area implementation has been delayed because of the Cyprus dispute According to former Cypriot Minister of Foreign Affairs Giorgos Lillikas strict and full control based on Schengen will create a huge tribulation on a daily basis for the Turkish Cypriots of Northern Cyprus and it is unclear if this control is possible before the resolution of the dispute The British Sovereign Base Areas of Akrotiri and Dhekelia a British Overseas Territory which is outside the EU also needs other handling and mechanisms Akrotiri and Dhekelia has no border control to Cyprus but has its own border control at its air base In November 2019 Cyprus s Foreign Affairs Minister Nikos Christodoulides revealed that Cyprus formally began the process of joining the Schengen Area in September In July 2023 Cyprus joined the Schengen Information System SIS which allows for cooperation on crime immigration and other security related matters within the Schengen Area In October 2023 the commission was to verify that the necessary conditions for the application of the Schengen acquis in the field of the Schengen Information System have been met The Cypriot President Nikos Christodoulides expects the country to be ready to join the Schengen Area by the end of 2025 Gibraltar The Gibraltar Spain border in 2004 with the Rock of Gibraltar in the background As a result of Brexit Gibraltar ceased to be part of the European Union on 31 January 2020 although for most purposes it was treated as part of it during the transition phase until 31 December 2020 Like the United Kingdom it had not been part of the Schengen Area but unlike the United Kingdom Gibraltar had also been outside of the EU customs union Owing to a declaration lodged by the United Kingdom with the EEC in 1982 in view of the entry into force of the British Nationality Act 1981 Gibraltarians had been counted as British nationals for the purposes of Community law and as such they had enjoyed full free movement within the European Economic Area and Switzerland During the Brexit transition period until 31 December 2020 Gibraltar was still for most purposes treated as an EU territory On 31 December 2020 the governments of Spain and of the United Kingdom advised by the Government of Gibraltar came to an agreement in principle on a framework for a UK EU treaty on aspects of Gibraltar s future relationship with the European Union Both Spain and the Head of the UK Mission to the European Union subsequently indicated with the European Commission their desire that such an agreement be negotiated and that the EU should seek a mandate for that purpose Chief Minister of Gibraltar Fabian Picardo stated that he anticipates that the arrangement which will apply for an initial period of four years will make Gibraltar s port and airport entry points to the Schengen Area These entry points will be managed by a Frontex operation Spain as the neighbouring Schengen member state will be responsible as regards the European Union for the implementation of the Schengen acquis Residents of Gibraltar regardless of their nationality are anticipated to enjoy maximised and unrestricted mobility to the Schengen Area UK citizens who are not residents of Gibraltar will be subjected to third country national checks when they enter Gibraltar through the Gibraltar port or airport It is anticipated that the third country national check will entail two controls one by Gibraltar s Borders and Coastguard Agency giving entry into Gibraltar and one by Frontex giving entry into the Schengen Area Picardo likened this arrangement to the juxtaposed controls at Eurostar stations although he admitted the situation there is slightly different On 31 December 2020 Spain s foreign minister Arancha Gonzalez Laya said that she anticipated that it would take about six months to negotiate and conclude a treaty but that in the meantime Spain would work to ensure that mobility at the border would be as fluid as possible Apart from the unrestricted mobility of persons the negotiations will also seek to address maximised and unrestricted mobility of goods between Gibraltar and the European Union and consider matters related to the environment the level playing field social security coordination citizens rights data and matters related to continued document recognition On 6 October 2021 the EU agreed to open formal negotiations with UK anticipating an agreement on Gibraltar and negotiations started soon after They were ongoing as of February 2022 hopes were they would finish during spring 2022 As of December 2022 update negotiations were continuing but appeared to be deadlocked over policing of passport control at Gibraltar airport Summary table State territory Area km2 Population 2021 EU accession Target date Obstacles Cyprus 9 251 1 244 188 1 May 2004 2025 Cease Fire line caused by Cyprus conflict Gibraltar United Kingdom 6 8 32 669 n a No date set The EU and the United Kingdom are to negotiate a treaty or other arrangement to apply to Gibraltar based on the agreement reached between the United Kingdom and Spain on 31 December 2020 Gibraltar is not a sovereign state so in international law the United Kingdom acts on behalf of Gibraltar Notes Agreement on accession to the EU Desired timeline of joining state for Council decision Application of Schengen rules in Gibraltar is not to be conditional on joining the EU The United Kingdom and thus Gibraltar was a member of the EU but not Schengen from 1 January 1973 to 31 January 2020 Territories of Schengen states outside the AreaThere are territories of Schengen member states that are exempted from the Schengen Agreement The only areas of Schengen member states located in Europe but excluded are the Faroe Islands and Svalbard Until 2008 when Switzerland joined the Schengen Area the German exclave Busingen am Hochrhein a small village in Baden Wurttemberg remained outside of the Schengen Area being completely surrounded by Switzerland French territories The French overseas departments of French Guiana Guadeloupe Martinique Mayotte and Reunion and the overseas collectivity of Saint Martin are part of the European Union but do not form part of the Schengen Area so one cannot travel there with a Schengen Visa The freedom of movement provisions of the EU apply but each territory operates its own visa regime for non European Economic Area EEA non Swiss nationals While a visa valid for one of these territories will be valid for all visa exemption lists differ A Schengen visa even one issued by France is not valid for these territories A visa for Sint Maarten which is valid for travelling to the Dutch side of the island of Saint Martin is also valid for the French side France also has several territories which are neither part of the EU nor the Schengen Area These are French Polynesia French Southern and Antarctic Lands New Caledonia Saint Barthelemy Saint Pierre and Miquelon and Wallis and Futuna Dutch territories Only the Netherlands European territory is part of the Schengen Area Six Dutch territories in the Caribbean are outside the Area Three of these territories Bonaire Sint Eustatius and Saba collectively known as the BES islands are special municipalities within the Netherlands proper The other three Aruba Curacao and Sint Maarten are autonomous countries within the Kingdom of the Netherlands All islands retain their status as Overseas countries and territories and are thus not part of the European Union The six territories have a separate visa system from the European part of the Netherlands and people travelling between these islands and the Schengen Area are subjected to full border checks with a passport being required even for EU Schengen citizens including Dutch national ID cards are not accepted Norwegian territories Svalbard is part of Norway and has a special status under international law It is not part of the Schengen Area There is no visa regime in existence for Svalbard either for entry residence or work but it is difficult to visit Svalbard without travelling through the Schengen Area although there are charter flights from Russia Since 2011 the Norwegian government has imposed systematic border checks on individuals wishing to enter and leave Svalbard requiring a passport or national identity card for non Norwegian citizens As a result the border between Svalbard and the rest of Norway is largely treated like any other external Schengen border need quotation to verify A Schengen visa must be multiple entry to allow returning to Norway There is no welfare or asylum system for immigrants on Svalbard and people incapable of supporting themselves may be sent away Danish territories The Danish territories of the Faroe Islands and Greenland are neither part of the European Union nor part of the Schengen Area and visas to Denmark are not automatically valid in these territories However both of these territories lack border controls on arrivals from the Schengen Area and the air or sea carriers are responsible for carrying out document checks before boarding as is common for travel inside the Schengen Area Citizens of EU EFTA countries can travel to the Faroes using a passport or a national ID card and to Greenland using a passport but citizens of Denmark Finland Iceland Norway or Sweden can use any acceptable identification such as driving licences or bank ID cards although this is advised against since aircraft might be diverted to Scotland in bad weather European microstatesThe border checkpoint in La Farga de Moles on the Andorra Spain border Four European microstates Andorra Monaco San Marino and the Vatican City are not officially part of the Schengen Area but are considered de facto within the Schengen Area as they have open or semi open borders and do not conduct systematic border controls with the Schengen countries that surround them Some national laws have the text countries against which border control is not performed based on the Schengen Agreement and the 562 2006 EU regulation which then includes the microstates and other non EU areas with open borders citation needed In 2015 Andorra Monaco and San Marino began negotiating an Association Agreement with the EU Monaco left the negotiations in 2023 while an agreement for Andorra and San Marino was expected to be concluded in 2024 Andorra s ambassador to Spain Jaume Gaytan stated in 2015 that he hoped that the agreement would include provisions to make the states associate members of the Schengen Agreement However the final text only concerned free movement of people and not border control issues However on 30 May 2024 the Council of the European Union authorised the opening of negotiations for agreements between the European Union and Andorra and San Marino respectively in order to create a legal basis for the absence of border controls between these countries and the Schengen area Principality of Andorra A landlocked country Andorra does not have an airport or seaport but there are several heliports Visitors to the country can gain access only by road or helicopter through Schengen members France or Spain Andorra has no systematic border controls with either France or Spain Border control points exist and border controls may be carried out in the other direction but these are more focused on customs control Andorra has considerably lower taxes than its neighbours with for example a standard VAT rate of just 4 5 Andorra does not have any visa requirements Citizens of EU countries need either a national identity card or passport to enter Andorra while anyone else requires a passport or equivalent Schengen visas are accepted but those travellers who need a visa to enter the Schengen Area need a multiple entry visa to visit Andorra because entering Andorra means leaving the Schengen Area and re entering France or Spain is considered a new entry into the Schengen Area Andorran citizens do not receive a passport stamp when they enter and leave the Schengen Area As of June 2024 the German Ministry of Foreign Affairs reports that Andorra has a de facto open border with Spain and France Principality of Liechtenstein Liechtenstein is also landlocked and does not have an international airport It has been a member of the Schengen Area since 2011 It does not have a border check at Balzers heliport as flights to and from Balzers must be to or from the Schengen Area Liechtenstein does not issue visas and as such recommends visitors apply for a visa in another Schengen country Principality of Monaco Monaco has an open border with France Schengen laws are administered as if it were part of the EU as a result of bilateral agreements with France and Schengen visas are accepted Both French and Monegasque authorities carry out checks at Monaco s seaport and heliport Republic of San Marino San Marino has an open border with Italy although some random checks are made by Italy s Guardia di Finanza and San Marino s Guardia di Rocca Vatican City State The Vatican City has an open border with Italy However there is no customs union between Italy and Vatican City hence vehicles may be subject to checks at the border Typical border controls would not be suitable in Vatican City due to its small size high number of pedestrian visitors and unique position as an enclave within Rome In 2006 the Vatican City showed interest in joining the Schengen agreement for closer cooperation in information sharing and similar activities covered by the Schengen Information System Opt outsDenmark Denmark maintains an opt out from the wider AFSJ policy area but has adopted the Schengen acquis on an intergovernmental basis however with an exemption for the autonomous territories of Greenland and Faroe Islands Denmark does not have voting rights for introductions and revocations of measures applied to the Schengen Area as a result of this opt out Ireland and the United Kingdom When EU states were negotiating subsuming the Schengen Agreement into the EU by the Treaty of Amsterdam Ireland and the United Kingdom were the only member states that had not signed the Agreement The UK did not want to join and Ireland wished to maintain its Common Travel Area with the United Kingdom and associated islands an arrangement that would be incompatible with Schengen membership while the UK remained out As a result both negotiated an opt out from the part of the treaty which was to incorporate the Schengen rules or acquis into EU Law when it came into effect on 1 May 1999 Under the relevant protocol either may request to participate in aspects of the Schengen acquis but this is subject to the approval of the Schengen states On 31 January 2020 the United Kingdom withdrew from the European Union and the protocol ceased to apply to it Ireland will continue to operate the Common Travel Area and not join the Schengen Area for the foreseeable future because it wants to keep open its land border with the UK In 1999 the UK formally requested participation in certain provisions of the Schengen acquis Title III relating to Police Security and Judicial Cooperation and this request was approved by the Council of the European Union on 29 May 2000 The United Kingdom s formal participation in the previously approved areas of cooperation was put into effect by a 2004 Council decision that came into effect on 1 January 2005 Although the United Kingdom was not part of the Schengen passport free area it still used the Schengen Information System a governmental database used by European countries to store and disseminate information on individuals and property This allowed the UK to exchange information with countries that are a part of the Schengen agreement often for the sake of liaising over law enforcement In 2020 the UK declared its intent to withdraw from these arrangements at the end of its transition period and did so on 31 December 2020 In contrast while Ireland initially submitted a request to participate in the Schengen acquis in 2002 which was approved by the Council of the European Union that decision took nearly eighteen years to be put into effect In February 2010 the Irish Minister for Justice in response to a parliamentary question said that The measures which will enable Ireland to meet its Schengen requirements are currently being progressed Ireland joined the law enforcement aspect of SIS II on 1 January 2021 with plans to have full operational capacity two months later Ireland is connected to the Schengen Information System SIS II and systematically checks all identity documents on SIS II at airports and designated ports of entry including flights from the UK EconomicsTotal trade between any two countries in the Schengen Area increases by approximately 0 1 per year The same amount of increase in trade is gained again for every 1 annual increase in immigration between the countries On average at each border the removal of controls is equivalent to the removal of a 0 7 tariff and the cost savings on a trade route increase with the number of internal borders crossed Countries outside of the Schengen Area also benefit Movement of people About 1 7 million people commute to work across a European border each day and in some regions these people constitute up to a third of the workforce For example 2 1 of the workers in Hungary work in another country primarily Austria and Slovakia Each year there are 1 3 billion crossings of Schengen borders in total 57 million crossings are due to transport of goods by road with a value of 2 8 trillion each year The trade in goods is affected more strongly than trade in services and the decrease in the cost of trade varies from 0 42 to 1 59 depending on geography trade partners and other factors Transit of goods The Single Administrative Document SAD is a customs declaration form used for goods entering or exiting the European Union Traders and agents can use the SAD to assist with declaring import export transit and community status declarations in manual processing situations The TIR Convention procedure is used for transit operations that begin end or travel in a third non EU country that is a signatory to the convention A Transit Accompanying Document TAD can be produced at the point of departure or by an authorised consignor It includes a barcode and the movement reference number that matches the transit declaration This is useful if goods are diverted or delayed EORI numbers are an official link to a specific registered address of a business concerned with arranging the export import or movement of goods across the EU It may also link to official records Union Customs Code describing the nature of the goods and the identity of vehicles or haulers to be used Regulation of internal bordersA typical Schengen internal border crossing has no border control post and only a common EU state sign displaying the name of the country being entered as here between Germany and Austria The larger blue sign announces entry to the Federal Republic of Germany in German the smaller white sign announces entry into the German state of Bavaria Before the implementation of the Schengen Agreement most borders in Europe were patrolled and a vast network of border posts existed around the continent to check the identity and entitlement of people wishing to travel from one country to another Since the implementation of the Schengen rules border posts have been closed and often entirely removed between participating countries The Schengen Borders Code requires participating states to remove all obstacles to free traffic flow at internal borders Thus road rail and air passengers no longer have their identity checked by border guards when travelling between Schengen countries although security controls by carriers are still permissible Per EU guidelines all EU citizens are advised to bring a passport or national identity card as one may be required Passport stamps are never issued when travelling between Schengen member states even when border controls between Schengen member states are temporarily re introduced Internal checks Although EU and EFTA nationals travelling within the Schengen Area are not required to show passports national identity cards or other identity documents at an internal border the laws of most countries still require them to carry national identity documents and to produce them to an authorised person on request Different rules apply to other nationals It is the obligation of everyone travelling within the area to be able to show a fully valid form of personal identification accepted by other Schengen states typically one issued by the state According to the Schengen rules hotels and other types of commercial accommodation must register all foreign citizens including citizens of other Schengen states by requiring the completion of a registration form by their own hand This does not apply to accompanying spouses and minor children or members of travel groups In addition a valid identification document has to be produced to the hotel manager or staff The Schengen rules do not require any other procedures thus the Schengen states are free to regulate further details on the content of the registration forms and identity documents which are to be produced and may also require the persons exempted from registration by Schengen laws to be registered Enforcement of these rules varies by country The Schengen regulation on crossing internal borders describes the checks for foreigners done by the police at suitable places inside each country clarification needed Internal controls The European Union constitutes a customs union and a Value Added Tax area However not all Schengen states or all of the territory of Schengen states are part of the customs union or VAT area Some countries therefore legally conduct customs controls targeted at illegal goods such as drugs Security checks can legally be carried out at ports and airports Also police checks can be conducted if they do not have border control as an objective are based on general police information and experience regarding possible threats to public security and aim in particular to combat cross border crime are devised and executed in a manner clearly distinct from systematic checks on persons at the external borders are carried out on the basis of spot checks Air travel Schengen arrival gate at Riga Airport RIX For flights within the Schengen Area either between Schengen member states or within the same Schengen member state law enforcement agencies airport authorities and air carriers are permitted only to carry out security checks on passengers and may not carry out border checks Such security checks can be conducted through the verification of the passenger s passport or national identity card such a practice must be used only to verify the passenger s identity for commercial or transport security reasons and not his or her immigration status For this reason law enforcement agencies airport authorities and air carriers cannot require air passengers flying within the Schengen Area who are third country nationals to prove the legality of their stay by showing a valid visa or residence permit In addition according to European Commission guidelines identity checks on air passengers flying within the Schengen Area should take place only either at check in or upon entry to the secured zone of the airport or at the boarding gate passengers should not be required to undergo a verification of their identity on more than one occasion before their flight within the Schengen Area Notwithstanding those principles the identity checks function as practical border controls and they affect illegal immigrants who arrive in Greece which until 2024 had no land border to another Schengen country although those land border controls can be reestablished if needed and want to fly to some other Schengen country The requirements as to which identity document to possess varies by country and airline Normally a passport or EU national identity card is needed Travellers boarding flights between Schengen countries but originating from a third country outside the area are required to go through Schengen entry border checks upon arrival in the Schengen Area This is because the route originates outside the Schengen Area and the authorities at the final destination would have no way of differentiating between arriving passengers who boarded at the origin and those who joined in the middle Additionally travellers are required to process through Schengen exit border checks upon departure Temporary border controls Temporary border controls conducted by the Danish Police in Krusa at the internal border with Germany A Schengen member state is permitted to reinstate border controls with another Schengen member state for a short period where there is a serious threat to that state s public policy or internal security or when the control of an external border is no longer ensured due to exceptional circumstances When such risks arise out of foreseeable events the state in question must notify the European Commission in advance and consult with other Schengen states The introduction of temporary controls at internal borders is a prerogative of the member states Although the European Commission may issue an opinion about the necessity and proportionality of introducing temporary controls at internal borders it cannot veto or override such a decision if it is taken by a member state In April 2022 the European Court of Justice clarified that temporary internal border controls cannot exceed a duration of six months for one and the same threat Only in case of a new serious threat the member state may apply such a measure afresh even immediately after the six month period has ended The ruling reinforced existing criticism of the quasi permanent controls in several member states since 2015 as being an unlawful violation of the Schengen Code In April 2010 Malta introduced temporary checks due to Pope Benedict XVI s visit It reimposed checks in 2015 in the weeks surrounding the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting Estonia introduced temporary checks in September 2014 due to the visit of US President Barack Obama In response to the European migrant crisis in 2015 several Schengen countries set up border controls In November 2017 Germany introduced temporary checks on flights arriving from Greece Between November 2017 and February 2018 of the 280 000 passengers on flights from Greece who were checked on arrival in Germany 270 were denied entry into Germany On 12 May 2018 Germany ended the temporary checks on incoming flights from Greece In 2019 Denmark set up border controls with Sweden due to serious attacks by Swedish citizens In response to the COVID 19 pandemic in 2020 almost all Schengen countries set up border controls Several of these controls blocked citizens of EU Schengen countries from entering allowed only citizens or residents of the country to enter plus prioritised traffic like food transport On 27 March 2020 the European Commission published Guidelines concerning the exercise of the free movement of workers during COVID 19 outbreak stating that member states should allow cross border workers unhindered access and ensure a smooth passage across the internal Schengen borders if they exercise a critical occupation such as health professionals care workers scientists in health related fields workers in the pharmaceutical and medical services food transportation essential infrastructure industries engineers Information and Communications Technology professionals firefighters police officers prison officers security guards fishermen and public servants Further any health screening for cross border workers must be carried out under the same conditions as the member state s own nationals exercising the same occupations In September 2024 Germany announced it would temporarily introduce checks at all of its land borders in order to tackle irregular migration The controls were scheduled to be in force for six months Internal border controls in place since 2015 The yellow and green coloured countries indicate Schengen members The green coloured countries indicate no current use of internal border controls The yellow coloured countries indicate internal border controls currently imposed The green lines indicate internal Schengen land borders without border controls the yellow lines indicate internal Schengen land borders with ongoing temporary border controls and the red lines indicate the external Schengen land borders with full border controls The table below lists internal border controls in place as of January 2025 according to the information that the member states have provided to the European Commission Member state Internal borders Official reasons may have varied over time First day Last day currently planned Austria Land borders with Slovakia and the Czech Republic European migrant crisis pressure on the asylum reception system high migratory pressure at the EU s external border to Turkey and the Western Balkans threat of arms trafficking and criminal networks due to the war in Ukraine human smuggling 16 October 2024 15 April 2025Land borders with Hungary and Slovenia 12 November 2024 11 May 2025 Bulgaria Land border and ferry connections with Romania European migrant crisis migratory pressure caused by crises in Afghanistan Gaza Lebanon and Syria Imposed and agreed on temporarily as a condition for admission of Bulgaria and Romania fixed by the Budapest agreement 1 January 2025 30 June 2025 Denmark Land and sea borders with Germany all internal borders European migrant crisis Islamist terrorist threat organised crime smuggling 2022 invasion of Ukraine irregular migration along the Central Mediterranean route 4 January 2016 11 May 2025 France Land borders with Belgium Luxembourg Germany Switzerland Italy and Spain Terrorism European migrant crisis 2022 invasion of Ukraine increase in irregular entry flows at the external borders 13 November 2015 30 April 2025 Germany Land border with Austria Terrorism European migrant crisis increase in irregular migration from Turkey through the Western Balkans strain on the asylum reception system human smuggling 13 September 2015 15 September 2025Land borders with the Czech Republic Poland and Switzerland 16 June 2024 15 September 2025Land borders with Belgium Denmark France Luxembourg and the Netherlands 16 September 2024 15 September 2025 Italy Land border with Slovenia Israel Hamas war European migrant crisis Islamist terrorist threat security risks associated with the 2025 Jubilee 21 October 2023 18 June 2025 Netherlands Land and air borders with Belgium and Germany Irregular migration and migrant smuggling 9 December 2024 8 June 2025 Norway Ports with ferry connections to the Schengen Area 2022 invasion of Ukraine threat to critical on shore and off shore infrastructures 26 November 2015 11 May 2025 Slovenia Land borders with Croatia and Hungary Israel Hamas war 2022 invasion of Ukraine European migrant crisis Islamist terrorist threat organised crime 21 October 2023 21 June 2025 Sweden All internal borders European migrant crisis Islamist terrorist threat 12 November 2015 11 May 2025French controls against migrants from northern Africa Following the Tunisian Revolution of 2010 11 the government of Italy gave six month residence permits to some 25 000 Tunisian migrants This allowed the migrants to travel freely in the Schengen Area In response both France and Germany threatened to impose border checks not wanting the Tunisian refugees to enter their territory In April 2011 for several hours France blocked trains carrying the migrants at the France Italy border at Ventimiglia At the request of France in May 2011 the European Commissioner for Home Affairs Cecilia Malmstrom proposed that more latitude would be available for the temporary re establishment of border control in the case of strong and unexpected migratory pressure or the failure of a state to protect the external borders of the EU On 25 July 2011 in delivering the European Commission s final assessment on the measures taken by Italy and France the Home Affairs Commissioner Cecilia Malmstrom said from a formal point of view steps taken by Italian and French authorities have been in compliance with EU law However I regret that the spirit of the Schengen rules has not been fully respected Malmstrom also called for a more coherent interpretation of the Schengen rules and a stronger evaluation and monitoring system for the Schengen Area 2015 migrant crisis During the migrant crisis of September 2015 Germany announced it was temporarily bringing border controls back in accordance with the provisions on temporary border controls laid down by the Schengen acquis Such border controls appear to be an attempt to prevent disorder from making the crisis worse Open borders appeared to have impeded Germany s ability to provide for very large numbers of persons seeking refuge all at once Germany signals the border controls are only temporary and only to support an orderly flow of migration into the area needs update Other countries including Austria Denmark Slovenia Hungary Sweden and Norway have set up border controls in response to the crisis In December 2015 Sweden passed a temporary law that allows the government to oblige all transport companies to check that their passengers carry valid photographic identification The new law came into effect on 21 December 2015 and was valid until 21 December 2018 The government decided that the new rules would apply from 4 January 2016 until 4 July 2016 The law led to the mandatory train change and passage through border control at Copenhagen Airport for travellers between Copenhagen and Sweden and with a reduction in service frequency Sweden had introduced border control from Denmark earlier 15 November 2015 but that could not stop the migrant flow since they have the right to apply for asylum once on Swedish ground First when the transport companies had to stop foreigners on the Danish side asylum seekers were efficiently stopped This caused considerable disruption to the train traffic since the railway station did not have capacity for such checks These checks lasted until 4 May 2017 after the EU commission declared such checks not acceptable On 30 May 2018 when the migrant crisis border controls were still active in some countries the European Parliament decided to condemn prolonged border checks between Schengen Area member countries But this was only a statement as the Parliament does not decide this 2015 Paris attacks After the November 2015 Paris attacks France introduced full identity and nationality checks at its borders However border controls were already in place the day of the attacks 13 November because of the upcoming 21st UN Conference on Climate Change Coronavirus response in 2020 Roadblocks and police vehicles at the temporarily closed Germany Poland border in Lubieszyn on 15 March 2020 during the COVID 19 pandemic Although some European politicians did call for Europe s internal borders to be temporarily closed the European Union decided in late February 2020 to turn down the idea of suspending the Schengen free travel area and introducing border controls with Italy The deputy leader of the Swiss Ticino League Lorenzo Quadri criticised the decision It is alarming that the dogma of wide open borders is considered a priority United States President Donald Trump said the European Union had failed to take the same precautions and restrict travel from China and other hot spots as the U S had implemented Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis stated in early March that European countries cannot ban the entry of Italian citizens within the Schengen Area The only possible way is to have the Italian prime minister call on his fellow citizens to refrain from travelling to other countries of the European Union After Slovakia Denmark the Czech Republic and Poland in mid March announced complete closure of their national borders European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said that Certain controls may be justified but general travel bans are not seen as being the most effective by the World Health Organization Moreover they have a strong social and economic impact they disrupt people s lives and business across the borders Von der Leyen also apologised to Italy amidst widespread discontent among Italians for the lack of solidarity shown by Europe By the end of March 2020 almost all internal Schengen borders had been closed to non essential travel By July 2020 most borders that were closed due to the coronavirus had been reopened Regulation of external bordersPassport control at an external Schengen border in FinlandThe Warsaw Spire housing Frontex s headquarters Participating countries are required to apply strict checks on travellers entering and exiting the Schengen Area These checks are co ordinated by the European Union s Frontex agency and subject to common rules The details of border controls surveillance and the conditions under which permission to enter into the Schengen Area may be granted are exhaustively detailed in the Schengen Borders Code Temporary restriction on the entry of persons without the right of free movement for non essential travel In view of the COVID 19 pandemic on 16 March 2020 the European Commission issued a recommendation to all EU and Schengen member states to introduce a temporary restriction on the entry of third country nationals i e travellers who are not EEA Swiss citizens and family members with the right of free movement to the Schengen Area for non essential travel for an initial period of 30 days with the possible prolongation of this period to be assessed based on further developments However third country nationals who are holders of long term visas or residence permits or are family members of EEA Swiss citizens are exempt from this restriction Further third country nationals with an essential function or need such as healthcare workers transport personnel aid workers military personnel seasonal agricultural workers passengers in transit those travelling for imperative family reasons and those in need of international protection or for other humanitarian reasons are exempt from this restriction Nevertheless the European Commission re iterated that coordinated and reinforced health checks should be carried out on all travellers who are permitted to enter the EU and Schengen Area Further on 30 March 2020 the European Commission published Guidance on the implementation of the temporary restriction on non essential travel to the EU on the facilitation of transit arrangements for the repatriation of EU citizens and on the effects on visa policy in order to provide advice and practical instructions The Guidance states that member states are permitted to take measures such as requiring non nationals to undergo a period of self isolation if arriving from a territory affected by COVID 19 provided that the same requirements is imposed on its own nationals The Guidance also clarifies that citizens of the European micro states Andorra Monaco San Marino and the Vatican City are exempt from the temporary restriction on the entry of third country nationals to the European Union and the Schengen Area for non essential travel In addition citizens of Serbia North Macedonia Montenegro and Turkey should be permitted entry to the European Union and the Schengen Area if they are stranded abroad in order to facilitate repatriation to their country of origin Third country nationals not covered by one of the exemptions from the temporary restriction of entry for non essential reasons who seek to enter the Schengen Area will be refused entry at the external border crossing point and will receive a refusal of entry form with the reason of refusal marked as I i e a threat to public health as well a passport stamp cancelled by an indelible cross in black ink and the letter I on the right hand side Some EU and Schengen member states have gone further than the European Commission recommendation and have restricted the entry of EEA Swiss citizens to their respective territories for non essential travel For example on 4 April 2020 French Border Police refused entry to a group of EU and British citizens who arrived in Marseille Provence Airport on a private jet from the UK with the intention of staying in a holiday villa in Cannes On 8 April 2020 the European Commission invited EU and Schengen member states to extend the restriction on the entry of third country nationals for non essential travel for a further period of 30 days until 15 May 2020 On 8 May 2020 the European Commission again invited member states to extend the restriction for another 30 days until 15 June 2020 On 11 June 2020 the European Commission recommended member states to prolong the restriction on the entry of third country nationals for non essential travel until 30 June 2020 Border checks Border checkpoint for vehicles operated by the Finnish Border Guard in Nuijamaa at the external border with Russia The lane on the far right is for EU EEA and Swiss citizens only whereas the other lanes are for all travellers All persons crossing external borders inbound or outbound are subject to a check by a border guard The only exception is for regular cross border commuters both those with the right of free movement and third country nationals who are well known to the border guards once an initial check has shown that there is no alert on record relating to them in the Schengen Information System or national databases they can only be subject to occasional random checks rather than systematic checks every time they cross the border Previously EEA and Swiss citizens as well as their family members enjoying the right of free movement were subject only to a minimum check when crossing external borders This meant that their travel document was subject only to a rapid and straightforward visual inspection and an optional check against databases for lost stolen travel documents Consultation of the Schengen Information System and other national databases to ensure that the traveller did not represent a security public policy or health threat was only permitted on a strictly non systematic basis where such a threat was genuine present and sufficiently serious In contrast other travellers were subject to a thorough check However after the November 2015 terrorist attacks in Paris at a meeting of the Council of the European Union on 20 November 2015 interior ministers from the Member States decided to implement immediately the necessary systematic and coordinated checks at external borders including on individuals enjoying the right of free movement Amendments were made to the Schengen Border Code to introduce systematic checks of the travel documents of EEA and Swiss citizens as well as their family members enjoying the right of free movement against relevant databases when crossing external borders The new regime came into force on 7 April 2017 Where carrying out systematic checks against databases would have a disproportionate impact on the flow of traffic at an external border such checks may be relaxed if on the basis of a risk assessment it is determined that it would not lead to a security risk how In exceptional and unforeseen circumstances where waiting times become excessive external border checks can be relaxed on a temporary basis example needed Border guards carry out the following procedures when checking travellers who cross external borders List of checks performed at external borders Procedure EEA Swiss citizens and family members with right of free movement Third country nationals on entry on exit Checking the traveller s identity based on their travel document Yes Yes YesChecking that the travel document is valid and has not expired Yes Yes YesChecking the travel document for signs of falsification or counterfeiting Yes Yes YesChecking the travel document for signs of falsification or counterfeiting using technical devices e g UV light magnifiers Optional Optional OptionalChecking the authenticity of the data stored on the RFID chip if the travel document is biometric Optional Optional OptionalChecking the travel document against the list of stolen misappropriated lost and invalidated documents in the Schengen Information System Interpol s SLTD database and other national databases Yes Yes YesConsulting the Schengen Information System and other national databases to ensure that the traveller does not represent a threat to public policy internal security public health or international relations of any Schengen Member State Yes Optional consultation of databases only where necessary YesRecording the traveller s entry exit in a database As of April 2016 only 10 Schengen Member States Estonia Finland Hungary Latvia Lithuania Malta Poland Portugal Slovakia and Spain record third country nationals entries and exits in their national databases but data is not exchanged between the national databases of these countries nor is there a Schengen wide centralised database tracking entries and exits in all 27 Schengen Member States Only Poland systematically records the entries and exits of EEA and Swiss citizens who are stopped at the border Optional Optional OptionalStamping the travel document No Yes with specific groups Yes with specific groups Checking that the traveller has the appropriate visa residence permit if required No Yes OptionalChecking the authenticity of the short stay visa if required and the identity of its holder by consulting the Visa Information System No Yes OptionalExamining entry and exit stamps in the travel document to ensure that the traveller has not exceeded the maximum duration of authorised stay No Yes with some exceptions OptionalVerifying the traveller s point of departure and destination No Yes NoVerifying the traveller s purpose of stay No Yes with some exceptions NoVerifying any documents evidence to support the traveller s purported purpose of stay No Optional with some exceptions NoVerifying that the traveller has sufficient funds for their stay and onward return journey or that they are in a position to acquire such means lawfully No Yes with some exceptions NoBorder control booths in the departures hall at Oulu Airport in Finland which will be staffed by the Finnish Border Guard when a flight is operated to a destination outside the Schengen Area Either the EU EEA Swiss citizens or All passports sign above the booths can be illuminated EasyPASS self service gates which eligible travellers can use to clear border control at Munich Airport GermanyFencing on the Vistula Spit marking the external border between Poland and RussiaBarrier at the external border between Lithuania and Belarus the border marker is visible behind the fence Mounted Hungarian police officers patrolling the external border between Hungary and Serbia As shown by the table above because many procedures are optional border guards have discretion in deciding how rigorously they check travellers at external border crossing points As a result the length of time taken to perform checks differs between Schengen countries Under the previous regime whereby those with the right to freedom of movement were subject only to a minimum check an entry check for an EEA or Swiss citizen took around five seconds on average in Italy whilst in Norway on average it took around 1 minute The disparities in checks on third country nationals who are subject to a more thorough check are even greater For example an entry check for an Annex II national takes around 15 seconds on average in Greece whilst it takes three to five minutes on average in Slovakia Similarly an entry check for an Annex I national on average lasts around 30 60 seconds in the Netherlands whilst in Latvia it lasts around two to five minutes on average After the new regime came into force on 7 April 2017 significantly longer waiting times were reported at numerous external border crossing points especially as it was just before the Easter holiday Travellers entering Slovenia from Croatia which was not yet part of the Schengen Area had to wait several hours as Slovenian border guards systematically checked the travel documents of all travellers including those with the right of free movement against relevant databases The Prime Minister of Slovenia Miro Cerar acknowledged that the situation was unacceptable In order to alleviate the long queues the systematic checking of travel documents of those with the right of free movement against relevant databases was temporarily suspended from the evening of Friday 7 April 2017 until the end of the weekend However the following weekend long queues re appeared The Prime Minister of Croatia Andrej Plenkovic criticised the situation calling it unsustainable and expressed concern about the impact on tourism which accounts for 18 of Croatia s GDP The President of Croatia Kolinda Grabar Kitarovic sent a formal letter to the European Commission to voice her concern about the effect of the new regime on border checks At a meeting held on 29 April 2017 the President of the European Commission Jean Claude Juncker Cerar and Plenkovic agreed that moving forward the systematic checking of the travel documents of those with the right of free movement against relevant databases would be suspended at land border crossing points between Croatia and Slovenia if the waiting time exceeds 15 minutes with targeted checks being carried out instead Long queues were also reported at external border crossing points in Greece where the leadership of the Hellenic Police which is responsible for border checks decided to suspend for a period of six months the systematic checking of travel documents of those with the right of free movement against relevant databases with the exception of the Kipoi land border crossing point with Turkey due to security concerns Greece was particularly affected by the implementation of the new regime as Greek identity cards were not machine readable at that time which meant that border guards had to enter the holder s information manually into the computer system to check the relevant databases if a Greek citizen presented an identity card instead of a passport Similarly long waiting times were reported at external border crossing points in France and Spain Finland Hungary and Italy also issued notifications suspending systematic checks at some external border crossing points In July 2017 Greece submitted a request to suspend the systematic checking of travel documents of those with the right of free movement against relevant databases for a further period of 18 months due to infrastructure shortcomings and increased traffic at 12 airports across the country When carrying out checks at external borders border guards are by law required to respect the dignity of travellers particularly in cases involving vulnerable persons and are forbidden from discriminating against persons based on their sex racial or ethnic origin religion or belief disability age or sexual orientation External border controls are located at roads crossing a border at airports at seaports and on board trains Usually there is no fence along the land border but there are exceptions like the Ceuta border fence and some places at the eastern border However surveillance camera systems some equipped with infrared technology are located at some more critical spots for example at the border between Slovakia and Ukraine where at some points there is a camera every 186 metres 203 yards All travellers entering and leaving the Schengen Area by general aviation or on a pleasure boat have to make their first point of entry final point of departure in an airport aerodrome or a seaport that is designated as an external border crossing point By way of derogation travellers on board a pleasure boat are permitted to make their first port of call at a port that is not designated as an external border crossing point if they notify the port authorities and obtain authorisation from the border guards In practice however this is a loophole hard to check and large scale drug smuggling using private boats has been uncovered Along the southern coast of the Schengen countries in the Mediterranean coast guards make a substantial effort to prevent private boats from entering without permission At many external border crossing points there are special lanes for EEA and Swiss citizens as well as their family members and other lanes for all travellers regardless of nationality At some external border crossing points there is a third type of lane for travellers who are Annex II nationals i e non EEA Swiss citizens who are exempt from the visa requirement Although Andorran and Sammarinese citizens are not EEA citizens they are nonetheless able to use the special lanes designated for EEA and Swiss citizens Since 1 January 2021 British citizens are no longer permitted to use the EEA Swiss lanes Some external border crossing points can only be used by certain travellers For example the border checkpoint in Veľke Slemence Slovakia on the border with Ukraine can only be crossed by pedestrians or cyclists who are EEA Swiss or Ukrainian citizens The border checkpoint in Ramoniskiai Lithuania on the border with Russia can only be crossed by residents of Lithuania and Russia all other travellers including EEA and Swiss citizens not resident in Lithuania Russia cannot use this border checkpoint Similarly the border checkpoint of Pededze Brunishevo Latvia on the border with Russia is only open to Latvian and Russian citizens The Narva 2 and Saatse border crossing points in Estonia on the border with Russia can only be used by residents of Estonia and Russia The border checkpoint in Polowce Pieszczatka Poland on the border with Belarus can only be crossed by Polish and Belarusian nationals In 2016 as a temporary measure for 180 days the two northernmost border checkpoints of Raja Jooseppi and Salla on the Finland Russia border could only be crossed by Finnish Russian and Belarusian citizens as well as their family members all other nationals including non Finnish EEA and Swiss citizens were not permitted to use these border checkpoints Further the border crossing points of Haapovaara Inari Karttimo Kurvinen Leminaho and Parikkala as well as the railway crossing point of Imatra are only open to Finnish and Russian citizens The additional obligations imposed by European law on national border authorities when it comes to processing travellers who are third country nationals e g the obligation to stamp their travel documents should not prevent the development of automated border control systems which are made available to such travellers As shown by the examples listed above of automated border control systems which have been developed at external border crossing points of the Schengen Area national border authorities have been able to adapt the design of their automated border control systems to allow third country nationals to make use of them One solution is to have a border guard physically positioned next to the automated border gates who can stamp travel documents where required this approach has been adopted by the Finnish Border Guard at the automated border gates in Helsinki Airport where eligible users who are required to receive a passport stamp include holders of Australian Canadian Japanese New Zealand South Korean and United States biometric passports and in the Port of Helsinki where eligible users who are required to receive a passport stamp include Russian citizens who are required to scan both the biodata page and the visa inside their passport then to step into the gate for a facial image and fingerprint recognition and after the gate opens to approach a border officer to have their passport stamped The Portuguese Servico de Estrangeiros e Fronteiras has also adopted the practice of positioning a border guard for stamping next to the automated border gates in Lisbon Airport where eligible users who are required to receive a passport stamp include holders of Angolan and Brazilian passports and holders of diplomatic service passports This approach has also been adopted in Italy where eligible users of eGates include holders of Australian Canadian Israeli Japanese New Zealand Singaporean South Korean United States and Vatican biometric passports A similar but slightly different solution has been adopted by the Dutch Royal Marechaussee at the Privium iris recognition automated border gates at Amsterdam Airport Schiphol where eligible users include registered EU EEA Swiss citizens US citizens who are Global Entry members and all nationals who are holders of diplomatic passports as well as by the German Federal Police at the ABG Plus iris recognition automated border gates at Frankfurt Airport where eligible users include registered EU EEA Swiss citizens and US citizens who are Global Entry members when eligible third country nationals use Privium ABG Plus after their iris is scanned and verified a different gate door turnstile opens to that for EU EEA Swiss citizens and the third country national user is directed to a lane which leads them to the front of the queue for manual passport checks at immigration desks where the border guard stamps the user s passport Another possible solution would be to design the automated border gates to print a paper slip with an entry or exit stamp on it as well as the user s name and travel document number whenever the user is a traveller who is subject to the requirement to have their travel document stamped Sometimes external border controls are located on non Schengen territory For example the French Border Police operates border checks at juxtaposed controls on travellers departing the United Kingdom for the Schengen Area before they board their train or ferry at St Pancras International Ebbsfleet International and Ashford International railway stations as well as at the Port of Dover and the Eurotunnel Folkestone Terminal ETIAS In November 2016 the European Commission proposed a system for an electronic authorisation of visa exempt third country nationals called ETIAS European Travel Information and Authorisation System Foreign visitors will be required to submit personal data in advance and pay a processing fee fee is waived for children The application is to be done over the internet and need to be made a few days before travel The authorisation will be valid for three years It is imagined as a system similar to the ESTA system of the United States and the ETA system of Canada ETIAS is scheduled to enter into operation six months after the EES in late 2025 Implementation of the Entry Exit System EES In 2025 the European Union plans to implement the Entry Exit System EES an automated IT system designed to register travelers from third countries each time they cross an EU external border This system will replace the traditional passport stamping method utilizing facial recognition and fingerprint scans to record entries and exits Introduction of the European Travel Information and Authorization System ETIAS Starting in 2025 travelers from visa exempt third countries will be required to obtain travel authorization through the European Travel Information and Authorization System ETIAS before entering the Schengen Area This system aims to enhance security by pre screening travelers and will involve an online application process with a fee of 7 ETIAS requirements will in general apply to those third country nationals who are not required to have a visa and have no residence permit or similar Carrier s responsibility Schengen rules require that all carriers conveying passengers across the Schengen external border must check before boarding that passengers have the correct travel documents and visas required for entry Carriers that transport third country nationals without the correct travel documents are imposed with financial penalties and are required to transport those refused entry back to the point of departure The aim of this measure is to prevent illegal immigration Further since immigrants have the right to apply for asylum at border control at ports of entry in the EU though such applications must be made in person in the country where asylum status is sought this measure has the effect of preventing prospective asylum seekers from boarding public transportation to the Schengen Area unless they have already obtained a Schengen visa or are visa exempt Short stay and transit visas Schengen Area Other EU members and territories of Schengen countries outside the Schengen Area with freedom of movement in the Schengen Area Visa not required for short stays in the Schengen Area Visa required to enter the Schengen Area and to transit some Schengen countries in some cases Visa required to enter or transit any Schengen countryFacilitated Rail Transit Document The rules applicable to short term entry visas into the Schengen Area are set out in EU regulations which contain two lists a list of the nationalities or classes of travel document holder which require a visa for a short term stay the Annex I list and a list which do not the Annex II list Being listed in the visa free list will sometimes but not always exempt the listed nationality or class from the requirement to obtain a work permit if they wish to take up employment or self employed activity during their stay business trips are not normally considered employment in this sense An application for a Schengen visa should be submitted to the embassy or consulate of the country which the traveller intends to visit If a traveller plans to visit multiple countries in the Schengen Area the application should be submitted to the embassy or consulate of the main destination If the main destination cannot be determined the traveller should apply for the visa at the embassy or consulate of the Schengen member state of first entry Often external service providers are contracted by certain diplomatic missions to process collect and return visa applications The standard application fee for a Schengen visa is EUR 80 There is a reduced visa application fee of EUR 40 for children aged 6 to 12 The visa application fee is waived for children under the age of 6 Where an application is submitted to an external service provider an additional service fee may have to be paid The visa application fee and the additional service fee if applicable are not refundable regardless of the outcome of the application Entry conditions for third country nationals A Schengen visa or a visa exemption does not entitle the traveller to enter the Schengen Area but rather allows the traveller to seek entry at the border crossing point The Schengen Borders Code lists requirements which third country nationals must meet to be allowed into the Schengen Area For this purpose a third country national is a person who does not enjoy the right of free movement i e a person who is not an EEA citizen or Swiss nor a family member of such a person The entry requirements for third country nationals who intend to stay in the Schengen Area for not more than 90 days in any 180 day period are as follows The traveller is in possession of a valid travel document or documents authorising them to cross the border a visa is not considered a travel document in this sense the acceptance of travel documents for this purpose remains within the domain of the member states The travel document must be valid for at least three months after the intended date of departure from the Schengen Area although in a justified case of emergency this obligation may be waived and must have been issued within the previous 10 years The traveller either possesses a valid visa if required or a valid residence permit The traveller can justify the purpose and conditions of the intended stay and has sufficient means of subsistence both for the duration of the intended stay and for the return to his or her country of origin or transit to a third country into which the traveller is certain to be admitted or is in a position to acquire such means lawfully The Schengen Information System does not contain a refusal of entry alert concerning the traveller and The traveller is not considered to be a threat to public policy internal security public health or the international relations of any of the Schengen states However even if the third country national does not fulfil the criteria for entry admission may still be granted On humanitarian grounds On grounds of national interests On grounds of international obligations If the person is not in possession of a visa but fulfils the criteria for being issued a visa at the border If the person holds a residence permit or a re entry visa issued by a Schengen statePassport stamp Certain travellers receive a passport stamp when entering and exiting the Schengen Area All 29 European countries within the Schengen Area have entry and exit stamps of a uniform design As of April 2016 at a national level 11 Schengen countries Estonia Finland Greece Hungary Latvia Lithuania Malta Poland Portugal Slovakia and Spain excessive citations have developed computer databases recording entries and exits of third country nationals i e travellers who are not EU EEA or Swiss citizens at external border crossing points However on a Schengen wide level there is no centralised computer database that tracks entries and exits at all of the external border crossing points of the 29 Schengen countries nor are entry and exit records from national databases shared between countries As a result law enforcement officials continue to rely on checking passport stamps as the primary way to check that travellers who do not have the right of free movement have not exceeded their length of permitted stay in the Schengen Area Regulation EU 2017 2226 envisages the establishment of an Entry Exit System EES which will record third country nationals entries and exits when they cross the external borders of the Schengen Area in a central database replacing passport stamps EES had been expected to enter into operation at the end of May 2023 but was delayed until 2025 There are no systematic immigration checks when travelling between Schengen countries i e crossing the internal borders of the Schengen Area Passport stamps are never issued when travelling between Schengen countries even when immigration checks between Schengen countries are temporarily re introduced When travelling to from a non Schengen country i e crossing the external borders of the Schengen Area the rules on stamping travel documents are as follows Persons whose travel documents are to be stamped Persons whose travel documents are not to be stampedThird country nationals unless covered by an exemption listed in the right hand column including both those with a visa and those not subject to visa requirements Family members not holding a residence card issued under Article 10 of Directive 2004 38 EC who are accompanying or joining EU EEA and Swiss citizens exercising the right of freedom of movement Family members regardless of whether or not they hold a residence card issued under Article 10 of Directive 2004 38 EC who are not travelling together with and not joining EU EEA and Swiss citizens exercising the right of freedom of movement Citizens of EU and EFTA member states exercising the right of freedom of movement Third country nationals holding a residence card issued under Article 10 of Directive 2004 38 EC but only if they are accompanying or joining a family member who is a citizen of an EU or EFTA state exercising their right of freedom of movement and presenting the residence card Third country nationals holding residence permits issued by a Schengen member state including British citizens who hold residence status under Article 18 of the Brexit withdrawal agreement Andorran Monegasque and San Marinese citizens Holders of local border traffic permits Heads of state and dignitaries whose arrival has been officially announced in advance through diplomatic channels Pilots and members of aircraft crews Seamen only when their ship calls in and in the area of the port of call Crew and passengers of cruise shipsLogbook recording which border guards are assigned passport stamps at the external border crossing point at the Port of Algeciras in Spain Border officials are required by law to stamp the travel documents of third country nationals who do not qualify for one of the exemptions listed in the right hand column when they cross external borders even when border controls have been relaxed However nationals of Andorra Monaco San Marino and Vatican City are exempt from this requirement as are heads of state whose visits were announced through diplomatic channels and holders of local border traffic permits and residence permits issued by a Schengen member state Certain exemptions also apply to the crews of ships and aircraft Exceptionally if stamping a person s travel document would cause serious difficulties such as political persecution border officials can instead issue a sheet of paper detailing the person s name travel document number and entry date and location However in practice border officials do not always stamp the travel documents of travellers as legally required If a person who should have received an entry stamp cannot show one either upon request by a law enforcement officer or upon leaving the Schengen Area to a border official the officer can presume that the person has been staying illegally in the Schengen Area and can expel them unless the person can demonstrate using credible evidence such as transport tickets and accommodation receipts that they have not exceeded their permitted length of stay in the Schengen Area Although according to EU rules third country nationals who hold residence permits should not have their travel documents stamped France nevertheless requires third country nationals holding a visa de long sejour valant titre de sejour a long stay visa serving additionally as a residence permit for up to one year to receive a passport stamp upon their first entry to the Schengen Area as a part of the process to validate the visa as a residence permit without an entry stamp the process cannot be completed Third country nationals who otherwise fulfil all the criteria for admission into the Schengen area must not be denied entry for the sole reason that there is no remaining empty space in their travel document to affix a stamp instead the stamp should be affixed on a separate sheet of paper Entry and exit stamps are applied in black ink except for the red date stamp and a two digit security code in the middle The two digit security code must be changed at least once a month although some Schengen countries such as Greece change security codes every day The stamps bear the country abbreviation within a circle of stars in the top left hand corner the name of the entry exit border crossing point in Latin alphabet at the bottom and an icon in the top right hand corner to denote the mode of entry exit Below the name of the border crossing point is an identifying number a record is kept of the identity of the border officer to whom a given stamp is assigned at any given time Entry stamps are rectangular and have an arrow into a square while exit stamps are rectangular with rounded corners and have an arrow out of a square The stamps do not indicate any maximum permitted duration of stay Border guards are required to ensure the secure storage of passport stamps in locked safes between shifts Border posts are advised to set out clear responsibilities and instructions for the distribution and use of passport stamps According to European Commission recommendations and guidelines stamps should be affixed in travel documents by border officials in the following manner in chronological order in a horizontal position in a clear and straight manner i e with enough ink and not over the edge of a page the exit stamp should be affixed in the proximity of the entry stamp no stamp should be affixed over another stamp or over the machine readable zone of a visa if the travel document contains a single entry Schengen visa the stamp should be affixed over the edge of the visa but without affecting the legibility of the conditions and security features of the visa if the travel document contains a multiple entry Schengen visa the stamp should be affixed on the page facing the one on which the visa is affixed If a third country national is refused entry to the Schengen Area the border official is required to affix an entry stamp in the travel document cancel the stamp by an indelible cross in blank ink and write the letter corresponding to the reason for the refusal of entry to the right hand side of the cancelled stamp By contrast if a border official has affixed a stamp in a travel document by mistake as opposed to a refusal of entry the stamp can be annulled by drawing two parallel lines through the top left hand corner Uniform design of Schengen member states passport stamps Entry stamp for air travel issued at Sandefjord Airport in Norway Entry stamp for rail travel issued at Nickelsdorf at Austro Hungarian border before Hungary joined the Schengen Area Entry stamp for road travel issued at Doirani at Greek North Macedonian border Entry stamp for ferry travel issued at the port of Amsterdam IJmond in Netherlands Exit stamp for air travel issued at Prague Ruzyne Airport in Czech Republic Exit stamp for rail travel issued at Bad Schandau at Czech German border before the Czech Republic joined the Schengen Area Exit stamp for road travel issued at Korczowa at Polish Ukrainian border Exit stamp for ferry travel issued at port of Helsinki in FinlandStays in excess of 90 days For stays in the Schengen Area as a whole which exceed 90 days a third country national will need to hold either a long stay visa for a period no longer than a year or a residence permit for longer periods A long stay visa is a national visa but is issued in accordance with a uniform format It entitles the holder to enter the Schengen Area and remain in the issuing state for a period longer than 90 days but no more than one year If a Schengen state wishes to allow the holder of a long stay visa to remain there for longer than a year the state must issue him or her with a residence permit The holder of a long stay visa or a residence permit is entitled to move freely within other states which compose the Schengen Area for a period of up to three months in any half year Third country nationals who are long term residents in a Schengen state may also acquire the right to move to and settle in another Schengen state without losing their legal status and social benefits Asylum seekers who request international protection under the Geneva Convention from a Schengen member state are not issued a residence permit but are instead issued within three days of the application being lodged an authorisation to remain on the territory of the member state while the application is pending or being examined This means that whilst their application for refugee status is being processed asylum seekers are only permitted to remain in the Schengen member state where they have claimed asylum and are not entitled to move freely within other states which compose the Schengen Area Successful applicants who have been granted international protection by a Schengen member state are issued residence permits which are valid for at least three years and renewable whilst applicants granted subsidiary protection by a Schengen member state are issued residence permits valid for at least 1 year and renewable unless there are compelling reasons relating to national security or public order Family members of beneficiaries of international or subsidiary protection from a Schengen member state are issued residence permits as well but their validity can be shorter Applicants who have been granted temporary protection by a Schengen member state as well as their reunited family members are issued residence permits valid for the entire period of temporary protection However some third country nationals are permitted to stay in the Schengen Area for more than 90 days without the need to apply for a long stay visa For example France does not require citizens of Andorra Monaco San Marino and the Vatican City to apply for a long stay visa In addition Article 20 2 of the Convention implementing the Schengen Agreement allows for this in exceptional circumstances and for bilateral agreements concluded by individual signatory states with other countries before the Convention entered into force to remain applicable As a result for example New Zealand citizens are permitted to stay for up to 90 days in each of the Schengen countries Austria Belgium Czech Republic Denmark Finland France Germany Greece Iceland Italy Luxembourg the Netherlands Norway Poland Portugal Spain Sweden and Switzerland which had already concluded bilateral visa exemption agreements with the New Zealand Government prior to the Convention entering into force without the need to apply for long stay visas but if travelling to other Schengen countries the 90 days in a 180 day period time limit applies excessive citations Entry conditions for family members of EEA and Swiss citizens Third country nationals who are family members of EEA and Swiss citizens exercising their right of free movement and who hold a residence card of a family member of a Union citizen issued by their EEA host country can visit another EEA member state or Switzerland without a visa for a short stay of up to three months in each member state A family member is defined as the spouse partner any of their children below age 21 or dependents including those of the spouse partner and dependent parents including those of the spouse partner Holders of a residence card of a family member of a Union citizen issued by a Schengen member state can travel to another Schengen member state without a visa regardless of whether they are travelling independently or accompanying or joining their EEA Swiss citizen family member However holders of a residence card of a family member of a Union citizen issued by Bulgaria Cyprus Ireland and the UK can travel to the Schengen Area without a visa only if they are accompanying or joining their EEA Swiss citizen family member British citizens had until 30 June 2021 to apply for the card If the non EEA family member is an Annex I national who presents themself at the border without a residence card of a family member of a Union citizen nor an entry visa but can show their family ties with the EEA Swiss citizens by other means then a visa must be issued at the border free of charge and entry permitted However as of December 2008 the right of entry of family members of EEA Swiss citizens laid down in Articles 5 2 and 5 4 of Directive 2004 38 EC has been incorrectly transposed into Belgian Latvian and Swedish law and not transposed at all by Austria Denmark Estonia Italy Lithuania Germany and Slovenia Five member states do not follow the Directive to the effect that non EEA family members may still face difficulties denial of boarding the vessel by the transport company denial to enter by border police when travelling to those states using their residence card issued by another EU member state A visa or other document s may still be required Local border traffic at external borders External Schengen or EU borders which have local border traffic permits Schengen states which share an external land border with a non EU member state are authorised by virtue of the EU Regulation 1931 2006 to conclude or maintain bilateral agreements with neighbouring third countries for the purpose of implementing a local border traffic regime Such agreements define a border area which may extend to a maximum of 50 kilometres 31 mi on either side of the border and provide for the issuance of local border traffic permits to residents of the border area Permits may be used to cross the EU external border within the border area are not stamped on crossing the border and must display the holder s name and photograph as well as a statement that its holder is not authorised to move outside the border area and that any abuse shall be subject to penalties Permits are issued with a validity period of between one and five years and allow for a stay in the border area of up to three months Permits may only be issued to lawful residents of the border area who have been resident in the border area for a minimum of one year or longer if specified by the bilateral agreement Applicants for a permit have to show that they have legitimate reasons to cross frequently an external land border under the local border traffic regime Schengen states must keep a central register of the permits issued and have to provide immediate access to the relevant data to other Schengen states Holders of local border traffic permits are able to spend up to 3 months every time they enter the border area of the country which has issued the permit this time limit is far more generous than the 90 days in a 180 day period normally granted to third country nationals visiting the Schengen Area Before the conclusion of an agreement with a neighbouring country the Schengen state must receive approval from the European Commission which has to confirm that the draft agreement is in conformity with the Regulation The agreement may only be concluded if the neighbouring state grants at least reciprocal rights to EEA and Swiss nationals resident on the Schengen side of the border area and agrees to the repatriation of individuals found to be abusing the border agreement As of June 2017 update ten local traffic agreements have come into force Hungary Ukraine from January 2008 Slovakia Ukraine from September 2008 Poland Ukraine in July 2009 Romania Moldova from October 2010 Latvia Belarus from February 2012 Norway Russia from May 2012 Poland Russia Kaliningrad Area from July 2012 suspended since July 2016 Latvia Russia from June 2013 Romania Ukraine from May 2015 An agreement between Croatia Bosnia and Herzegovina is applied on provisional basis pending ratification On 28 April 2014 Moldova was classified as an Annex II nationality On 11 June 2017 Ukraine was classified as an Annex II nationality Therefore Moldovan and Ukrainian citizens who hold biometric passports no longer require a visa to enter the Schengen Area thus obviating the need to apply for a local border traffic permit unless they wish to spend more than 90 days in a 180 day period permitted by the visa exemption given that local border traffic permit holders are allowed to stay for 3 months in the border area on each entry There are or have been plans for Lithuania Russia Poland Belarus Bulgaria Serbia and Bulgaria North Macedonia local border traffic agreements The agreement between Poland and Belarus had been due to enter into force by 2012 but was delayed by Belarus with no implementation date set as of Oct 2012 In late 2009 Norway began issuing one year multiple entry visas without the usual requirement of having family or a business partner in Norway called Pomor Visas to Russians from Murmansk Oblast and later to those from Arkhangelsk Oblast Finland is not planning border permits but has issued over one million regular visas for Russians in 2011 and many of them multiple entry visas The EU was planning to allow up to 5 year validity on multiple entry visas for Russians There is also a similar system for local border traffic permits between Spain and Morocco regarding Ceuta and Melilla This system is older and was included in the 1991 accession treaty of Spain to the Schengen Area In this case there are identity checks for anyone travelling to other parts of the Schengen Area possible by boat and air only Such checks are not the rule for other local border traffic zones Western Balkan states SERBIA CANDIDATE SINCE 2012 NEGOTIATING MONTENEGRO CANDIDATE SINCE 2010 NEGOTIATING NORTH MACEDONIA CANDIDATE SINCE 2005 NEGOTIATING ALBANIA CANDIDATE SINCE 2014 NEGOTIATING BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA CANDIDATE SINCE 2022 KOSOVO APPLIED IN 2022 CROATIA MEMBER SINCE 2013 SLOVENIA MEMBER SINCE 2004 ROMANIA ITALY GREECEThe European Union has made a commitment to accept the countries of the Western Balkans as full EU members Citizens of Albania Bosnia and Herzegovina Kosovo Montenegro North Macedonia and Serbia can enter the Schengen Area without a visa On 30 November 2009 the EU Council of Ministers for Interior and Justice abolished visa requirements for citizens of Montenegro North Macedonia and Serbia while on 8 November 2010 it did the same for Albania and Bosnia and Herzegovina The former took effect on 19 December 2009 and the latter on 15 December 2010 Visa liberalisation negotiations between the EU and the Western Balkans excluding Kosovo were launched in the first half of 2008 and ended in 2009 for Montenegro North Macedonia and Serbia and 2010 for Albania and Bosnia and Herzegovina Before visas were fully abolished the Western Balkan countries Albania Bosnia and Herzegovina Montenegro North Macedonia and Serbia had signed visa facilitation agreements with the Schengen states in 2008 The visa facilitation agreements were at the time supposed to shorten waiting periods lower visa fees including free visas for certain categories of travellers and reduce paperwork In practice however the new procedures turned out to be longer more cumbersome more expensive and many people complained that it was easier to obtain visas before the facilitation agreements entered into force The European Commission launched a visa liberalisation dialogue with Kosovo on 19 January 2012 In June 2012 the Commission handed over a roadmap on visa liberalisation to the Kosovo authorities which identified the legislation and institutional measures that Kosovo needed to adopt and implement to advance towards visa liberalisation On 4 May 2016 the European Commission proposed visa free travel for the citizens of Kosovo The European Commission has proposed to the Council of the European Union and the European Parliament to lift the visa requirements for the people of Kosovo by transferring Kosovo to the visa free list for short stays in the Schengen Area The EU approved the visa exemption for nationals of Kosovo effective from 1 January 2024 National security risk Hungary allows entry to the Schengen Area for persons from countries such as Belarus and Russia with limited security screening resulting in a national security risk for the Schengen Area Police and judicial co operationSpanish and Portuguese police vehicles at the Spain Portugal police co operation centre Spanish Comisaria Conjunta Hispano Lusa Portuguese Centro de Cooperacao Policial in Tui on the Portugal Spain border To counter the potentially aggravating effects of the abolition of border controls on undocumented immigration and cross border crime the Schengen acquis contains compensatory police and judicial measures Chief among these is the Schengen Information System SIS a database operated by all EU and Schengen states and which by January 2010 contained in excess of 30 million entries and by January 2014 contained in excess of 50 million entries according to a document published in June 2015 by the Council of the European Union Around 1 million of the entries relate to persons 72 of which were not allowed to enter and stay in the Schengen Area Only 7 of persons listed on the SIS database were missing persons The vast majority of data entries on the SIS around 49 million concern lost or stolen objects The European Council reports that in 2013 an average of 43 stolen vehicles a day were detected by authorities using the SIS database A list of EU authorities with access to SIS is published annually in the Official Journal of the European Union As at 24 June 2015 235 authorities can use the SIS database The SIS database is operationally managed by eu LISA The Schengen Agreement also allows police officers from one participating state to follow suspects across borders both in hot pursuit and to continue observation operations and for enhanced mutual assistance in criminal matters The Schengen Convention also contained measures intended to streamline extradition between participating countries however these have now been subsumed into the European Arrest Warrant system Legal basisProvisions in the treaties of the European Union The legal basis for Schengen in the treaties of the European Union has been inserted in the Treaty establishing the European Community through Article 2 point 15 of the Treaty of Amsterdam This inserted a new title named Visas asylum immigration and other policies related to free movement of persons into the treaty currently numbered as Title IV and comprising articles 61 to 69 The Treaty of Lisbon substantially amends the provisions of the articles in the title renames the title to Area of freedom security and justice and divides it into five chapters called General provisions Policies on border checks asylum and immigration Judicial cooperation in civil matters Judicial cooperation in criminal matters and Police cooperation The Schengen Agreement and the Schengen Convention The Schengen Area originally had its legal basis outside the then European Economic Community having been established by a sub set of member states of the Community using two international agreements The 1985 Schengen Agreement Agreement between the Governments of the States of the Benelux Economic Union the Federal Republic of Germany and the French Republic on the gradual abolition of checks at their common borders The 1990 Schengen Convention Convention implementing the Schengen Agreement of 14 June 1985 between the Governments of the States of the Benelux Economic Union the Federal Republic of Germany and the French Republic on the gradual abolition of checks at their common borders On being incorporated into the main body of European Union law by the Amsterdam Treaty the Schengen Agreement and Convention were published in the Official Journal of the European Communities by a decision of the Council of Ministers As a result the Agreement and Convention can be amended by regulations See alsoEuropean Union portalEurope portalOpen Balkan Economic zone formed by a regional organization in Southeastern Europe Central America 4 Border Control Agreement Boundary treaty in Central America Common Travel Area Open borders area comprising the United Kingdom Ireland the Isle of Man and the Channel Islands eu LISA Agency of the European Union 2015 European migrant crisis 2010s mass immigration crisis in the European Union FADO European image archiving system for identity documents Mechanism for Cooperation and Verification EU system for commitment compliance Nordic Passport Union Nordic ease of travel agreement Prum Convention Law enforcement treaty in part of Europe Public Register of Travel and Identity Documents Online Online repository of security features in travel documents Trans Tasman Travel Arrangement Arrangement between Australia and New Zealand Compact of Free Association US Micronesia Marshall Islands Palau agreements Southern Common Market South American economic agreementPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targetsNotesDenmark s participation in the Schengen acquis is based on an intergovernmental basis rather than EU law due to a treaty opt out Not an EU member The United Kingdom the administering power considers that the area of Gibraltar is 6 8 km2 2 6 sq mi while for Spain it is 6 7 km2 2 6 sq mi However the various extensions using land reclaimed from the sea have in practice increased it to 6 8 km2 2 6 sq mi References World Economic Outlook Database October 2023 IMF org International Monetary Fund Archived from the original on 31 March 2024 Retrieved 31 March 2024 Cyprus Aims for Schengen Area Accession by End of 2025 Schengen News 14 January 2025 Cyprus Prepares to Join Schengen Zone Boosting Tourism and Security The National Herald 14 January 2025 Schengener Ubereinkommen auswaertiges amt de in German German Ministry of Foreign Affairs Archived from the original on 2 June 2024 Retrieved 2 June 2024 Tourist Student and Work visa to Europe Swift Tourism 2010 Archived from the original on 5 September 2017 Retrieved 14 September 2011 Schengen Area European Commission 13 February 2025 European Parliamentary Research Service March 2016 The economic impact of suspending Schengen PDF Archived PDF from the original on 23 December 2022 Retrieved 15 June 2017 European Council on Foreign Relations 2016 The Future of Schengen Archived from the original on 26 June 2017 Retrieved 15 June 2017 Schengen s economic impact Putting up barriers The Economist 6 February 2016 Archived from the original on 15 May 2018 Retrieved 15 June 2017 Felbermayr G Groschl J Steinwachs T 27 April 2016 Trade costs of border controls in the Schengen area Centre for Economic Policy Research Archived from the original on 25 May 2022 Retrieved 15 June 2017 See also Felbermayr G Groschl J Steinwachs T March 2017 The Trade Effect of Border Controls Evidence from the European Schengen Agreement PDF Archived PDF from the original on 20 October 2017 Retrieved 15 June 2017 The refugee crisis Fixing Schengen is not enough Archived from the original on 15 December 2018 Retrieved 14 December 2018 Fortress Europe BBC World Service archived from the original on 17 January 2019 retrieved 4 December 2012 Schengen area by Latvian Law Firm Baltic Legal archived from the original on 31 March 2019 retrieved 19 September 2013 The Schengen Area PDF European Commission Archived PDF from the original on 7 August 2017 Retrieved 15 September 2011 Owen Nora 14 March 1995 Dail Debates volume 450 column 1171 Archived from the original on 7 June 2011 O Donoghue John 9 March 1999 Dail Debates volume 501 column 1506 permanent dead link Declaration by Ireland on Article 3 of the Protocol on the position of the United Kingdom and Ireland attached to the Treaty of Amsterdam This terminology is for example used in the Final Act of the Agreement concluded by the Council of the European Union and the Republic of Iceland and the Kingdom of Norway concerning the latters association with the implementation application and development of the Schengen acquis Archived 22 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine Schengen area Controls at air and sea borders with Bulgaria and Romania will be lifted European Commission home affairs ec europa eu Archived from the original on 19 January 2024 Retrieved 19 January 2024 Press corner Archived from the original on 29 February 2024 Retrieved 31 December 2023 Schengen Council decides to lift land border controls with Bulgaria and Romania Consilium Archived from the original on 12 December 2024 Retrieved 12 December 2024 Moment of relief as Romania and Bulgaria join EU border free zone BBC 12 December 2024 Archived from the original on 22 December 2024 Retrieved 4 January 2025 Romania Bulgaria join borderless Schengen zone after 13 year wait Al Jazeera 1 January 2025 Archived from the original on 3 January 2025 Retrieved 4 January 2025 Bulgaria and Romania to join Schengen area starting with air and sea borders Commission welcomes landmark Council decision European Commission European Commission Archived from the original on 29 February 2024 Retrieved 31 December 2023 Schengen zone Delay for Bulgaria and Romania to join British Broadcasting Corporation 9 June 2011 Archived from the original on 10 June 2011 Retrieved 9 June 2011 Castle Stephen 22 September 2011 Europe Denies 2 Nations Entry to Travel Zone The New York Times Archived from the original on 24 September 2011 Retrieved 23 September 2011 Robinson Frances 22 September 2011 Bulgaria Romania Blocked From Travel Zone The Wall Street Journal Archived from the original on 26 March 2023 Retrieved 25 September 2011 Romania tells EU We are ready for Schengen when you are euractiv com 5 December 2013 Archived from the original on 23 January 2016 Retrieved 31 July 2014 Nu intrăm in Schengen Austria și Olanda au votat impotriva noastră Digi24 in Romanian Archived from the original on 8 December 2022 Retrieved 8 December 2022 Ministrul austriac de Interne Are sens să includem Croația și să nu includem acum Bulgaria și Romania in Schengen Digi24 in Romanian 3 December 2022 Archived from the original on 3 December 2022 Retrieved 3 December 2022 Austria rejects EC s call to allow Romania Bulgaria into Schengen 14 September 2023 Archived from the original on 6 October 2023 Retrieved 2 October 2023 Joint Hungarian Austrian Romanian and Bulgarian Declaration Joint Hungarian Austrian Romanian and Bulgarian Declaration 22 November 2024 Archived from the original on 1 December 2024 Retrieved 28 November 2024 List of non Schengen countries that can be visited with a Schengen visa YOYO TRAVELS Dubai 14 January 2021 Archived from the original on 24 April 2023 Retrieved 24 April 2023 Travel to Andorra Govern d Andorra Archived from the original on 18 May 2023 Retrieved 24 April 2023 Andorra and the Schengen Area Andorra Resorts 8 March 2022 Archived from the original on 29 April 2023 Retrieved 24 April 2023 World Population Prospects 2022 United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Population Division Retrieved 17 July 2022 World Population Prospects 2022 Demographic indicators by region subregion and country annually for 1950 2100 XSLX Total Population as of 1 July thousands United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Population Division Retrieved 17 July 2022 Protocol on the accession of the Government of the Republic of Austria to the Agreement between the Governments of the Member States of the Benelux Economic Union the Federal Republic of Germany and the French Republic on the gradual abolition of controls at their common borders signed at Schengen on 14 June 1985 as amended by the Protocols of 27 November 1990 25 June 1991 and 6 November 1992 on the accession of the Governments of the Italian Republic the Kingdom of Spain and the Portuguese Republic and the Hellenic Republic respectively Government of the Netherlands Archived from the original on 31 March 2019 Retrieved 31 October 2014 Beschluss des Exekutivausschusses zur Inkraftsetzung des Schengener Durchfuhrungsubereinkommens in Osterreich Resolution of the Executive Committee on the implementation of the Schengen Convention in Austria in German 7 October 1997 Archived from the original on 1 April 2019 Retrieved 1 November 2014 Council Decision of 20 May 1999 concerning the definition of the Schengen acquis for the purpose of determining in conformity with the relevant provisions of the Treaty establishing the European Community and the Treaty on European Union the legal basis for each of the provisions or decisions which constitute the acquis Official Journal of the European Union L 176 1 10 July 1999 Archived from the original on 13 January 2016 Retrieved 1 November 2014 Agreement between the Governments of the States of the Benelux Economic Union the Federal Republic of Germany and the French Republic on the Gradual Abolition of Checks at their Common Borders Government of the Netherlands Archived from the original on 1 April 2019 Retrieved 31 October 2014 Decision of the Executive Committee of 22 December 1994 on bringing into force the Convention implementing the Schengen Agreement of 19 June 1990 Official Journal of the European Union L 239 130 22 December 1994 Archived from the original on 9 April 2016 Retrieved 31 October 2014 Treaty between the Kingdom of Belgium the Czech Republic the Kingdom of Denmark the Federal Republic of Germany the Republic of Estonia the Hellenic Republic the Kingdom of Spain the French Republic Ireland the Italian Republic the Republic of Cyprus the Republic of Latvia the Republic of Lithuania the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg the Republic of Hungary the Republic of Malta the Kingdom of the Netherlands the Republic of Austria the Republic of Poland the Portuguese Republic the Republic of Slovenia the Slovak Republic the Republic of Finland the Kingdom of Sweden the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland Member States of the European Union and the Republic of Bulgaria and Romania concerning the Accession of the Republic of Bulgaria and Romania to the European Union Deposited with the Government of the Italian Republic Council of the European Union Archived from the original on 30 October 2023 Retrieved 17 January 2019 Council Decision EU 2024 210 of 30 December 2023 on the full application of the provisions of the Schengen acquis in the Republic of Bulgaria and Romania Official Journal of the European Union L 2024 210 4 January 2024 Archived from the original on 4 January 2024 Retrieved 3 January 2024 Council Decision EU 2024 3212 of 12 December 2024 setting the date for the lifting of checks on persons at internal land borders with and between the Republic of Bulgaria and Romania Official Journal of the European Union L 2024 3212 23 December 2024 Retrieved 1 January 2025 TREATY CONCERNING THE ACCESSION OF THE REPUBLIC OF CROATIA TO THE EUROPEAN UNION EU Archived from the original on 9 December 2022 Retrieved 9 December 2022 Council Decision EU 2022 2451 of 8 December 2022 on the full application of the provisions of the Schengen acquis in the Republic of Croatia Official Journal of the European Union L 320 41 14 December 2022 Archived from the original on 16 December 2022 Retrieved 15 December 2022 Schengen area Council decides to lift border controls with Croatia EU Archived from the original on 9 December 2022 Retrieved 9 December 2022 Treaty between the Kingdom of Belgium the Kingdom of Denmark the Federal Republic of Germany the Hellenic Republic the Kingdom of Spain the French Republic Ireland the Italian Republic the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg the Kingdom of the Netherlands the Republic of Austria the Portuguese Republic the Republic of Finland the Kingdom of Sweden the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland Member States of the European Union and the Czech Republic the Republic of Estonia the Republic of Cyprus the Republic of Latvia the Republic of Lithuania the Republic of Hungary the Republic of Malta the Republic of Poland the Republic of Slovenia the Slovak Republic concerning the accession of the Czech Republic the Republic of Estonia the Republic of Cyprus the Republic of Latvia the Republic of Lithuania the Republic of Hungary the Republic of Malta the Republic of Poland the Republic of Slovenia and the Slovak Republic to the European Union Deposited with the Government of the Italian Republic Council of the European Union Retrieved 17 January 2019 COUNCIL DECISION of 6 December 2007 on the full application of the provisions of the Schengen acquis in the Czech Republic the Republic of Estonia the Republic of Latvia the Republic of Lithuania the Republic of Hungary the Republic of Malta the Republic of Poland the Republic of Slovenia and the Slovak Republic Official Journal of the European Union L 323 34 8 December 2007 Archived from the original on 13 January 2016 Retrieved 27 October 2014 The final step of Schengen enlargement controls at internal air borders to be abolished in late March Slovenia s EU Presidency 25 March 2008 Archived from the original on 22 July 2011 Retrieved 7 February 2009 EUR Lex 42000A0922 08 EN EUR Lex eur lex europa eu Schengen and Tourists Government of Greenland Archived from the original on 25 July 2017 Visa and Work Permit Government of the Faroe Islands Archived from the original on 24 September 2016 Retrieved 14 June 2017 General Information on Schengen Short Term Visas Royal Danish Embassy in London 4 June 2009 Archived from the original on 10 January 2010 Retrieved 1 February 2010 Protocol on the accession of the Kingdom of Denmark to the Agreement on the gradual abolition of controls at the contracting parties common borders signed at Schengen on 14 June 1985 Government of the Netherlands Archived from the original on 1 April 2019 Retrieved 31 October 2014 COUNCIL DECISION of 1 December 2000 on the application of the Schengen acquis in Denmark Finland and Sweden and in Iceland and Norway Official Journal of the European Union L 309 24 9 December 2000 Archived from the original on 13 January 2016 Retrieved 27 October 2014 Protocol on the accession of the Government of the Republic of Finland to the Agreement on the gradual abolition of controls at the contracting parties common borders signed at Schengen on 14 June 1985 Government of the Netherlands Archived from the original on 2 January 2019 Retrieved 31 October 2014 Doubles controles aux frontieres dans les aeroports de la capitale pour les Francais des Antilles Double border controls at the capital s airports for French people from the West Indies in French Senate of France 20 September 2018 Archived from the original on 20 September 2020 Retrieved 15 March 2020 Vertrag zwischen der Schweizerischen Eidgenossenschaft und der Bundesrepublik Deutschland uber die Einbeziehung der Gemeinde Busingen am Hochrhein in das schweizerische Zollgebiet Treaty between the Swiss Confederation and the Federal Republic of Germany regarding the inclusion of the municipality of Busingen am Hochrhein in the Swiss customs territory in German Fedlex 3 September 1998 Archived from the original on 7 March 2021 Retrieved 9 February 2021 Art 16 Im Verkehr zwischen Busingen und der Schweiz ist ein Grenzubertrittspapier nicht erforderlich Eine Grenzabfertigung findet nicht statt In traffic between Busingen and Switzerland a document valid for border crossing is not required There is no border control EUR Lex 42000A0922 06 EN EUR Lex Europa Archived from the original on 16 November 2022 Retrieved 5 January 2023 Bonet Navarro Jaime 2005 El estatuto especial del Monte Athos ante la tradicion religiosa El derecho eclesiastico griego y el derecho comunitario europeo The special status of Mount Athos before the religious tradition Greek ecclesiastical law and European community law Boletin de la Facultad de Derecho in Spanish UNED Archived from the original on 2 July 2020 Retrieved 22 January 2021 The Constitution of Greece PDF Legislation online 27 May 2008 Archived from the original PDF on 17 January 2021 Retrieved 23 January 2021 Regime of Aghion Oros Mount Athos Article 105 Protocol on the accession of the Government of the Hellenic Republic to the Agreement between the Governments of the Member States of the Benelux Economic Union the Federal Republic of Germany and the French Republic on the gradual abolition of controls at their common borders signed at Schengen on 14 June 1985 as amended by the Protocol signed at Paris on 27 November 1990 on the accession of the Government of the Italian Republic and by the Protocols signed at Bonn on 25 June 1991 on the accession of the Governments of the Kingdom of Spain and the Portuguese Republic Government of the Netherlands Archived from the original on 2 January 2019 Retrieved 31 October 2014 COUNCIL DECISION of 13 December 1999 on the full application of the Schengen acquis in Greece Official Journal of the European Union L 327 58 9 December 2000 Archived from the original on 13 January 2016 Retrieved 27 October 2014 Cooperation agreement between the Kingdom of Belgium the Federal Republic of Germany the French Republic the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg the Kingdom of the Netherlands the Italian Republic the Kingdom of Spain the Portuguese Republic the Hellenic Republic the Republic of Austria the Kingdom of Denmark the Republic of Finland the Kingdom of Sweden i e the Contracting Parties to the Schengen Agreement and to the Schengen Convention and the Republic of Iceland and the Kingdom of Norway on the gradual abolition of controls at their common borders Government of the Netherlands Archived from the original on 1 April 2019 Retrieved 1 November 2014 Agreement with the Republic of Iceland and the Kingdom of Norway concerning the latters association with the implementation application and development of the Schengen acquis Council of the European Union Archived from the original on 20 October 2017 Retrieved 1 November 2014 Agreement concluded by the Council of the European Union and the Republic of Iceland and the Kingdom of Norway concerning the latters association with the implementation application and development of the Schengen acquis Official Journal of the European Union L 176 36 10 July 1999 Archived from the original on 22 February 2014 Retrieved 1 November 2014 Protocol on the accession of the Government of the Italian Republic to the Agreement between the Governments of the Member States of the Benelux Economic Union the Federal Republic of Germany and the French Republic on the gradual abolition of controls at their common borders signed at Schengen on 14 June 1985 Government of the Netherlands Archived from the original on 2 January 2019 Retrieved 31 October 2014 Resolucion de 26 de mayo de 1998 de la Secretaria General Tecnica del Ministerio de Asuntos Exteriores 10 July 1997 Archived from the original on 20 October 2017 Retrieved 1 November 2014 Protocol between the European Union the European Community the Swiss Confederation and the Principality of Liechtenstein on the accession of the Principality of Liechtenstein to the Agreement between th