Visa & travel day-limit rules by country
Most visas and visa-free arrangements let you stay only a set number of days within a given window — the Schengen Area's 90 days in any rolling 180 being the best-known example. Go over, even by a day, and you risk fines, entry bans, and problems on future trips. The rolling maths is easy to get wrong, especially across multiple trips.
This section lays out the day limits behind common visas and visa-free regimes: how many days you get, the window they're counted over (fixed or rolling), whether the clock resets on exit, and links to the official immigration sources. Know your allowance before you book the next trip.
Track visas rules automatically
Bounded counts your days for every rule on this page and warns you before you cross a limit.
Frequently asked questions
You may spend up to 90 days in the Schengen Area within any rolling 180-day period. It's not a simple reset — on every day you look back 180 days and count how many you were inside. Bounded does this calculation for you continuously.
Not for rolling-window rules like Schengen — days you've already used only age out after 180 days have passed. Fixed-window or per-entry visas behave differently; each page notes which type applies.
Consequences range from fines and a stamp on exit to multi-year re-entry bans, depending on the country and length of overstay. Tracking your remaining days is the simplest way to avoid it.
Explore other rules
For information only. These pages are a plain-English summary of publicly available rules, not tax, legal, or immigration advice. Rules change and depend on your personal circumstances — always confirm with the official source and a qualified professional before acting.