Region guide · Schengen Area

Schengen visa: €90 fee, the 90/180 rule & countries in 2026

Last reviewed 12 July 2026 · Source: European Commission / national consulates

A Schengen short-stay visa (type C) lets holders travel throughout the 29-country Schengen area with no internal border checks, for up to 90 days in any 180-day period. Many nationalities are visa-exempt for short stays; those who aren’t apply at the consulate of their main destination. This guide covers the fee, the all-important 90/180 rule, the country list, and how to apply.

At a glance

Document
Schengen visa (type C, short stay)
Official fee
€90 adult · €45 child (6–11)
Maximum stay
90 days in any 180
Area
29 countries
Entries
Single, double or multiple
Processing
~15 calendar days (up to 45)
Passport validity
3 months beyond departure + issued within 10 years
Apply at
Consulate / VFS of main destination
Apply at the official consulate or its authorised visa centre (e.g. VFS Global, TLScontact). Unaffiliated “visa agencies” charge extra for form-filling you can do yourself. This page is informational — we don’t process applications or add fees.

Which countries are in the Schengen area

The area covers most EU members plus four non-EU states. As of 2026 it includes: Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czechia, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden and Switzerland. Ireland is in the EU but not in Schengen and issues its own visas. One valid Schengen visa covers all 29.

The 90/180 rule explained

The single most misunderstood point: short-stay visitors may spend a maximum of 90 days within any rolling 180-day window, across the whole area combined — not per country. To check compliance on any date, count backwards 180 days; the total days you were present in the Schengen area during that window must not exceed 90. The days “roll off” as they pass out of the 180-day window, so the allowance gradually regenerates. Overstaying, even by a day, can trigger fines and future entry bans.

Use the European Commission’s official Schengen visa calculator to plan complex itineraries — especially if you combine several trips in a year.

Schengen visa fee

Official Schengen short-stay visa fees, 2026
ApplicantGovernment fee
Adult€90
Child 6–11€45
Child under 6Free
Reduced (visa-facilitation nationalities)€35

A separate service fee applies if you lodge through an outsourced visa centre. The government fee is non-refundable if the visa is refused.

Requirements

How to apply

  1. Identify the country where you’ll spend the most time (or your first entry point) — you apply there.
  2. Book an appointment at that country’s consulate or authorised visa centre.
  3. Complete the form, gather documents, and buy compliant insurance.
  4. Attend the appointment, give fingerprints, and pay the €90 fee.
  5. Wait about 15 calendar days (longer in peak season) for a decision.

Frequently asked questions

How much is a Schengen visa?

€90 for adults, €45 for children 6–11, free under 6, and €35 for nationalities with a visa-facilitation agreement, plus any service-centre fee.

Does the 90 days reset when I change countries?

No. The 90-day allowance is shared across the whole Schengen area within any 180-day window.

Which country do I apply to?

The one where you’ll spend the most time, or if evenly split, your first point of entry.

Is ETIAS the same as a Schengen visa?

No. ETIAS is a cheaper travel authorisation for visa-exempt nationals, not a visa. If you need a Schengen visa, ETIAS does not apply to you.

Do I need insurance?

Yes — travel medical insurance of at least €30,000 is mandatory for the visa.

Requirements and fees can change. Always confirm the current details with the consulate of your main destination before you apply.

← Back to all destinations · Related: ETIAS explained, UK ETA, travel insurance for visas, passport validity rules.