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Something changed at European borders on April 10, 2026, and it’s worth knowing about it before you fly.
The new Europe entry exit system, called EES, is now fully live at every external border crossing across 29 countries. That means that passport stamps are gone. Your border record is digital now.
And the 90-day rule, which used to rely on ink and memory, is tracked automatically.
If your Euro trip is coming up, here's what's different and what you should do about it.
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It's a digital border registration system. Every time a non-EU traveler enters or exits the Schengen area, the Europe entry exit system logs the crossing: your name, passport details, date, location.
On your first time through, border officers also collect a photo and fingerprints. After that, future crossings are quicker because your data's already in the system.
The rollout started on October 12, 2025, with different border points coming onboard gradually.
Full enforcement at every crossing point hit on April 10, 2026. So if you crossed into Europe before that and got a stamp, that was the last one.
The countries covered are all 27 Schengen member states, minus Cyprus and Ireland, plus Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, and Switzerland. That's 29 countries total.
It applies at land borders, ports, and airports. Cyprus and Ireland are not part of it, so if your itinerary goes through either, those crossings work on a different system.

If you're traveling on a US, UK, Canadian, Australian, or most other non-EU passports, yes.
The European Union entry exit system covers all non-EU nationals on short stays up to 90 days in any 180-day period, regardless of whether you need a visa or not.
Visa holders go through the system too, though if fingerprints are already on file from the visa application, they're not re-collected at the border.
EU citizens and people with long-term residency aren't affected.
One note on kids: children under 12 are exempt from fingerprint scanning. They still get a photo taken, but that's the extent of it. Anyone 12 and older goes through the same process as adults.

Your first crossing takes a bit longer than what you might be used to. That's the registration moment: the officer scans your passport, records your details, takes a photo, and scans your fingerprints.
Some airports have self-service kiosks that let you handle part of this yourself before reaching the officer.
Where the official Travel to Europe app has been activated by the country, you can also pre-register some of your data up to 72 hours before arrival, which cuts the time down at the desk.
If your passport has a chip (there's a small rectangular symbol on the cover, usually near the bottom), you may be able to use automated e-gates at airports that have them.
That's generally faster, especially during peak hours. Without a biometric passport, you go through the officer lane, which is completely fine. It's just slower.
After that first crossing, the process speeds up. Your biometrics are already stored, so the check is a match against what's on record rather than a full registration again.
In rare cases the system may need to re-collect data, but that's the exception.
This is the part that matters most for frequent visitors to Europe. Under the old stamp system, counting your days was a manual process, and it was inconsistent. Stamps got missed. Dates were hard to read. People made mistakes.
EES removes all of that. Every entry and exit is logged digitally, and the system calculates your authorized stay in real time.
If you show up at the border having already used your 90 days within the last 180, entry will be refused. There's no benefit of the doubt, no missed stamp to fall back on.
If Europe travel is a regular part of your life, or you tend to stay close to the limit, it's worth calculating your days carefully before booking flights. There are free Schengen day-counter tools widely available that do the math for you. Use one.
A common question since EES was announced: if there's no stamp, how do you prove when you entered or left?
Your record exists in the EES database. If you need proof of your entry or exit dates, for insurance, an employer, a visa application, or anything else, you can request it from border authorities. Depending on the country, that comes as a printed document or a digital certificate. It's not automatic, you'd need to ask for it, but it's available.
Worth knowing before you travel, even if you hope to never need it.
ETIAS is a separate system entirely. The European Travel Information and Authorisation System is a pre-travel authorization, similar to the US ESTA or UK ETA.
It's for visa-exempt travelers and requires a short online application before you leave home. Most approvals take a few minutes, and the authorization stays valid for three years or until your passport expires.
ETIAS is scheduled to launch in the last quarter of 2026. No confirmed date yet.
If your Europe travel is planned for this spring or summer, you don't need it. But if you're planning something for late 2026 or 2027, keep an eye on it. Visa holders are exempt from ETIAS but still go through EES at the border.
The short version: EES is what happens at the border. ETIAS is what happens before you travel. They're related but separate.
The European Union entry exit system stores your name, passport details, biometrics, and a record of every entry and exit. Data is held for three years after your last trip to an EES country, or deleted sooner if your passport expires before that window closes.
The system is managed by eu-LISA, the EU agency that handles large-scale border IT, and operates under EU data protection law.
Access is limited to border and law enforcement authorities. You have rights to access your own record and request corrections if something is wrong, handled through national authorities or eu-LISA depending on what needs changing.
Check your passport. If it has the chip symbol, you may be able to use automated gates. Look it up for the specific airports on your itinerary.
Look into the Travel to Europe app or pre-registration options offered by your destination country. Pre-registering some information before arrival can reduce your time at the border desk.
If Europe travel is something you do frequently, run your numbers through a Schengen day counter before booking. EES makes the enforcement real-time now. It's not worth the risk of getting it wrong.
And check the official travel-europe.europa.eu/ees page closer to your departure. Countries introduced EES gradually, and there may still be operational variations at specific airports or ports during the early months. Guidance may also be updated as things settle.
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