Schengen Visa 2026 — Complete Guide: How to Apply, Fees & Requirements
The Schengen Visa grants access to 27 European countries with a single visa. This comprehensive 2026 guide covers the 90/180-day rule, ETIAS, visa types, fees, required documents, and step-by-step application process.
Last updated: March 2026. Information verified against official government immigration sources.
Visa requirements change frequently. Always verify the latest requirements at the official embassy or government immigration portal before applying.
What is the Schengen Area?
The Schengen Area is a borderless travel zone comprising 27 European countries that have removed internal border controls. Named after the 1985 Schengen Agreement signed in Luxembourg, it is the world's largest free movement zone, covering over 4 million km² with a population of over 420 million.
A single Schengen visa allows you to travel freely between all member countries during the validity of your visa, without the need for separate national visas. It is one of the most powerful travel documents in the world.
The 27 Schengen Countries (2026)
| Country | Member Since | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Austria | 1997 | EU member |
| Belgium | 1995 | EU member |
| Croatia | 2023 | EU member (joined Schengen Jan 2023) |
| Czech Republic | 2007 | EU member |
| Denmark | 2001 | EU member |
| Estonia | 2007 | EU member |
| Finland | 2001 | EU member |
| France | 1995 | EU member |
| Germany | 1995 | EU member |
| Greece | 2000 | EU member |
| Hungary | 2007 | EU member |
| Iceland | 2001 | Non-EU (EEA) |
| Italy | 1997 | EU member |
| Latvia | 2007 | EU member |
| Liechtenstein | 2011 | Non-EU |
| Lithuania | 2007 | EU member |
| Luxembourg | 1995 | EU member |
| Malta | 2007 | EU member |
| Netherlands | 1995 | EU member |
| Norway | 2001 | Non-EU (EEA) |
| Poland | 2007 | EU member |
| Portugal | 1995 | EU member |
| Slovakia | 2007 | EU member |
| Slovenia | 2007 | EU member |
| Spain | 1995 | EU member |
| Sweden | 2001 | EU member |
| Switzerland | 2008 | Non-EU |
The 90/180 Day Schengen Rule — Explained
This is the most commonly misunderstood aspect of Schengen travel. The rule is simple: you may spend a maximum of 90 days in the Schengen Area within any rolling 180-day period.
- The 180-day window is rolling — not a fixed calendar period. It looks back 180 days from any given day.
- Days spent in any Schengen country count toward the same 90-day limit.
- The rule applies to both visa-free nationals and holders of a short-stay (Type C) Schengen visa.
- Overstaying can result in a ban of up to 5 years and difficulties obtaining future Schengen visas.
Use the official EU Schengen Stay Calculator to check your remaining allowed days.
Types of Schengen Visa
Type C — Short-Stay Visa (up to 90 days)
The standard Schengen visa for tourism, business, family visits, and short courses. Valid for up to 90 days in any 180-day period. Can be single entry, double entry, or multiple entry (MEV). MEV is increasingly standard and may be granted for 1 or 5 years based on your travel history and the issuing country's policy.
Type D — National Long-Stay Visa (91 days to 1 year)
A Type D visa is a national visa issued by one Schengen country for stays exceeding 90 days (study, work, family reunification, etc.). It is valid only in the issuing country — not for free movement throughout the Schengen Area. However, from 2024, a valid Type D visa allows visa-free transit through other Schengen countries for up to 90 days.
ETIAS — European Travel Information and Authorisation System
ETIAS is a pre-travel authorisation system for visa-exempt nationals (US, UK, Canada, Australia, Japan, and ~60 others). It is not a visa, but rather a mandatory pre-registration for travel into the Schengen Area.
- Cost: €7 per application
- Validity: 3 years or until passport expiry
- Processing: Usually within minutes; can take up to 30 days in rare cases
- Launch: Expected 2025–2026 (delayed from 2024). Check travel-europe.europa.eu/etias for the official launch date.
Schengen Visa Requirements (2026)
Standard documents required for a Type C Schengen visa application:
- Completed and signed Schengen visa application form
- Valid passport (minimum 3 months validity beyond intended stay, issued within last 10 years, at least 2 blank pages)
- Two recent passport-size photographs (35×45mm, white background)
- Travel medical insurance: minimum €30,000 coverage, valid throughout Schengen Area
- Proof of accommodation (hotel bookings, invitation letter from host)
- Proof of sufficient funds (bank statements, last 3 months)
- Round-trip flight reservation (not necessarily purchased — a reservation is acceptable)
- Proof of employment or enrollment (employer letter, payslips, or student enrollment certificate)
- Travel itinerary
- Visa fee payment receipt (€90 for adults)
Schengen Visa Fees 2026
- Adults (12+): €90
- Children 6–11: €45
- Children under 6: Free
- Service fee (VFS/BLS): Varies by country (~€25–45)
The fee was increased from €80 to €90 in June 2024. Note: some nationalities benefit from reduced or waived fees under bilateral agreements (e.g., certain Western Balkan nationals).
Which Embassy to Apply To?
Apply to the embassy or consulate of:
- Your main destination if you are visiting multiple Schengen countries
- The country where you will spend the most nights if visiting multiple countries equally
- Your first point of entry if you cannot determine a main destination