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Understanding Your Visa

Visa Validity vs Duration of Stay

Two of the most commonly confused concepts on your Schengen visa. Understanding the difference is essential to avoid overstaying.

Validity Period

The time window during which you are permitted to travel. Your first entry must be on or after the "FROM" date, and you must leave by the "UNTIL" date.

Think of it as: The calendar dates your visa is "active"

Duration of Stay

The maximum number of days you may spend inside the Schengen Area within the validity period. This is the total across all visits.

Think of it as: Your "budget" of days you can spend

How They Work Together

The validity period is the window. The duration of stay is the allowance within that window. You must respect both limits. You cannot enter outside the validity period, and you cannot stay longer than the duration allows — even if your validity period hasn't ended.

Worked Examples

Single Entry — 15-day holiday

Validity Period1 March 2026 – 31 March 2026 (31 days)
Duration of Stay15 days
EntriesSingle (01)

You can enter any time between 1–31 March, but once you enter, you may only stay for 15 consecutive days. If you enter on 10 March, you must leave by 24 March at the latest.

Multiple Entry — Business traveller

Validity Period1 January 2026 – 30 June 2026 (6 months)
Duration of Stay90 days
EntriesMultiple (MULT)

You can enter and exit the Schengen Area as many times as you wish between January and June. However, your total time spent inside the Schengen Area must not exceed 90 days across all visits combined. The 90/180-day rule also applies.

Double Entry — Two-trip plan

Validity Period1 April 2026 – 30 September 2026 (6 months)
Duration of Stay30 days
EntriesDouble (02)

You may enter the Schengen Area twice during this period. Your total stay across both trips cannot exceed 30 days. For example: Trip 1 = 12 days in April, Trip 2 = 18 days in July.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Thinking validity period = allowed stay duration
Your validity period is the window for travel. Your duration of stay is how many days you can actually remain. A visa valid for 6 months with 30 days duration means 30 days maximum stay within those 6 months.
Not counting entry and exit days
Both your day of arrival and day of departure count as full days. Arriving at 11 PM still counts as a full day.
Ignoring the 90/180-day rule for MULT visas
Even with a MULT visa, you cannot exceed 90 days in any rolling 180-day period. This applies across all Schengen countries combined.
Assuming days 'reset' after leaving and re-entering
All days spent in the Schengen Area accumulate. Leaving and re-entering does not reset your day count.
Planning departure on the visa expiry date
You must physically be outside the Schengen Area before midnight on your visa expiry date. Allow buffer time for flight delays.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between visa validity and duration of stay?
Visa validity is the time window during which your visa permits travel (e.g., 1 Jan – 30 Jun). Duration of stay is the maximum number of days you can spend in the Schengen Area within that window (e.g., 30 days). You must respect both limits.
Can I stay for the entire validity period?
Only if your duration of stay equals the validity period length. For example, if your visa is valid for 30 days with a duration of 30 days, yes. But if your visa is valid for 6 months with a duration of 30 days, you can only stay 30 days total within those 6 months.
How does this interact with the 90/180-day rule?
The 90/180-day rule is an additional constraint. Even if your visa allows 90 days, you cannot exceed 90 days in any rolling 180-day period. For multiple-entry visas valid for more than 180 days, this rule determines when you can re-enter after using up days.
My visa says 90 days but is valid for 1 year — is this a mistake?
No, this is normal for multiple-entry visas. The 1-year validity means you can travel within that year. The 90-day duration means your total time in the Schengen Area cannot exceed 90 days in any 180-day period within that year.
Do weekends and public holidays count towards my duration?
Yes. Every calendar day you spend in the Schengen Area counts, including weekends, public holidays, and partial days (arriving late at night or leaving early in the morning).

Track Your Schengen Days Accurately

Use our 90/180 Day Calculator to ensure you stay within both your visa validity and duration limits.