Published on : 01 Apr 2026
Breaking: The EU’s Entry/Exit System (EES) β the biggest change to European border crossing in decades β becomes fully mandatory at every Schengen border on April 10, 2026. That is 9 days from today. If you hold a UK, Australian, Canadian, New Zealand or US passport and you are flying to Europe this spring or summer, passport stamping is gone forever. Here is everything you need to do, know and prepare for β before you reach the border.
Published: April 1, 2026 EES Full Launch Date: April 10, 2026 β 9 days away Countries Affected: 29 Schengen Area countries Who It Applies To: All non-EU citizens including UK, Australia, Canada, USA, NZ Cost to Register: FREE β no pre-registration needed, done at the border Data Stored: Fingerprints + facial image β valid 3 years or until passport expires Passport Stamps: Replaced permanently from April 10 ETIAS (paid permit): Coming late 2026 β NOT required yet
The EU Entry/Exit System (EES) is Europe’s new digital border management platform. It launched in phased rollout on October 12, 2025 across 29 Schengen countries, and from April 10, 2026 it becomes fully mandatory at every single Schengen external border β airports, seaports, land crossings, the Channel Tunnel and Dover.
What this means in plain terms: the physical passport stamp that has marked entry into Europe for generations is being replaced permanently by a digital biometric record. Every non-EU traveller β including every British, Australian, Canadian, American and New Zealand citizen β must now submit their fingerprints and a facial scan at the EU border on their first visit.
This is not optional. It is not a pilot. As of April 10, it applies to 100% of eligible passengers at 100% of Schengen border points.
If you are flying to France, Spain, Italy, Greece, Portugal, Germany, the Netherlands, or any of the other 29 participating countries this Easter, this summer, or beyond β this change affects every single trip you take.
EES did not switch on everywhere overnight. The October 2025 launch began a six-month phased rollout with increasing coverage:
| Phase | Date | Coverage |
|---|---|---|
| Launch | Oct 12, 2025 | At least 1 border point per country |
| Phase 2 | Dec 2025 | Biometric checks begin (facial + fingerprints) |
| Phase 3 | Jan 2026 | 50% of borders active β 35% of passengers processed |
| Phase 4 | Mar 2026 | All borders operating EES β 50% of passengers processed |
| FULL LIVE | Apr 10, 2026 | All borders β 100% of eligible passengers β mandatory |
Since October 2025, over 45 million border crossings have been registered through EES. The system has already identified over 24,000 entry refusals and flagged more than 600 individuals as security risks. It has also detected multiple cases of identity fraud β including a traveller in Romania found using two separate passports under different names.
What you may have experienced since October 2025 varies by airport. Some travellers have sailed through in under a minute. Others β particularly at Lisbon, Geneva, Paris CDG, Prague and Barcelona β have faced queues of 3β7 hours during peak periods when kiosks failed or staffing was inadequate. Those were at 35β50% compliance. April 10 takes it to 100%.
The first time you cross into the Schengen Area after EES is active at that border point, this is the process:
Hand your passport to the border officer or scan it at a self-service kiosk. Your identity and travel document details are recorded digitally. No ink stamp. No paper ledger.
A camera at the kiosk or officer’s desk captures your facial image. This takes approximately 5β10 seconds. Glasses should be removed if possible. Ensure your face is clear and well-lit.
Four fingers of one hand are scanned β this is the step that typically takes longest for first-time registrations. Children under 12 are exempt from fingerprints but still require the facial scan.
At some border points β particularly Eurostar, Dover, and Folkestone β you may be asked up to four admissibility questions on screen or by a border officer:
These are not new requirements β they have applied to UK citizens since Brexit. EES now formalises them digitally. Have your booking confirmation, accommodation details and return flight information ready on your phone.
First registration time: Typically 3β8 minutes per person at a kiosk. Up to 15 minutes if processed manually. Subsequent visits: Only a passport scan plus a single fingerprint or photo β much faster. Record valid for: 3 years from first registration, or until your passport expires β whichever is sooner.
A critical point that many travellers are getting wrong: there is nothing you need to do before you travel.
EES registration happens at the border, on the day of travel, for free. There is no online portal, no advance booking, and no fee. If you see any website offering to register you for EES in advance for a fee β that is a scam.
However, several countries including Sweden have integrated the official “Travel to Europe” mobile app (iOS and Android), co-developed by iProov and Inverid, which allows you to optionally pre-submit some passport and biometric data up to 72 hours before arrival to save time at the kiosk. This app integration is not yet universal across all 29 Schengen countries, but it is expanding.
What to do: Download the “Travel to Europe” app before your trip and check whether your destination country supports pre-enrollment. If it does, it can meaningfully cut your kiosk time. If it does not, simply proceed normally at the border.
The registration process varies depending on how you enter the Schengen Area. Here is the breakdown for each route most relevant to UK, Australian and Canadian travellers:
The process is the same for all air travellers arriving at a Schengen airport.
Key airports to expect queues at during the April 10 full rollout: Madrid (MAD), Barcelona (BCN), MΓ‘laga (AGP), Paris CDG, Rome Fiumicino (FCO), Amsterdam Schiphol (AMS), Athens (ATH), Lisbon (LIS)
Recommendation: Allow 90 minutes from landing to airport exit on your first EES registration. During Easter peak (April 3β6), allow 2β3 hours.
Eurostar operates juxtaposed controls β meaning French border police operate on UK soil. You complete EES before you board in London, not on arrival in Paris or Brussels.
Eurostar tip: Arrive at St Pancras at least 90 minutes before departure from April 10 onward. During Easter and summer peak, allow 2 hours.
Eurotunnel has built a purpose-built EES pre-registration area at its Folkestone terminal.
Folkestone tip: Add 45β60 minutes to your Folkestone arrival time versus what you would normally allow.
Dover has built a new purpose-built EES processing area at the Western Docks.
Dover explicitly confirmed it will introduce full admissibility questions from April 10. The Port of Dover and DFDS/P&O have both published updated guidance β check your ferry operator’s website for recommended arrival times before your crossing.
Dover tip: Add 60β90 minutes to your usual pre-departure arrival time for the first weeks after April 10.
Many travellers have questions about privacy. Here is what EES actually stores:
Data collected:
How long it is stored:
Who manages it: Data is operated by eu-LISA β the EU agency for large-scale IT systems β under full GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) compliance. Access is restricted to authorised border authorities only.
What it enforces: The system automatically calculates how many days you have spent in the Schengen Area within any rolling 180-day period. The 90/180-day rule still applies for UK, Australian and Canadian citizens β EES simply enforces it digitally instead of manually. An overstay now cannot go undetected.
Overstay penalties: In France, the cited fine for overstaying is β¬198. An overstay can also affect future visa applications across the entire Schengen Area.
Not everyone needs to register. You are exempt from EES if:
β You hold EU, EEA or Swiss citizenship β You hold a valid long-stay visa for an EU country β You hold EU residency status (e.g., a British citizen with EU residency) β You are travelling to Ireland or Cyprus β neither is in the Schengen Area β You are a cruise passenger whose entire voyage begins and ends outside the Schengen Area (short port calls may still require registration depending on route)
Important for dual nationals: If you hold both a UK passport and an EU passport, present your EU passport at the border. You will be processed as an EU citizen and skip EES entirely.
For UK, Australian and Canadian citizens who spend extended time in Europe, EES fundamentally changes the enforcement landscape.
Under the old manual stamp system, the 90/180-day rule was frequently misunderstood and inconsistently enforced. Border officers sometimes missed stamps. Travellers sometimes crossed smaller land borders without being checked at all.
Under EES, this is impossible. The system automatically tracks every entry and exit across all 29 Schengen countries simultaneously. It flags you the moment you reach day 90.
What this means practically:
For digital nomads, long-stay visitors and those with second homes in Europe: This is a material change. Know your Schengen day count before you travel. The European Commission’s official calculator is available at travel-europe.europa.eu.
There is an important nuance for travellers planning summer Europe trips: EU member states have the option to temporarily pause EES biometric checks for up to 90 days after the April 10 full launch (with a possible 60-day extension), specifically to prevent dangerous queue buildups during peak summer travel.
This means some airports or crossings may revert to manual passport stamps temporarily during JulyβAugust 2026 if queues become unmanageable. This is not a delay or reversal of EES β it is a managed safety valve built into the legislation.
What this means for you: Do not assume EES will not apply at your destination because it is summer. Some borders will apply it fully from April 10 with no pause. Others may suspend checks briefly at peak times. The only safe assumption is that EES is active β and to allow extra border time regardless.
Look for the small gold camera icon on the front cover of your passport. Biometric passports can use faster self-service kiosks. Non-biometric passports are still accepted but require manual processing by a border officer, which takes significantly longer.
UK passports issued after 2006 are biometric. Australian passports issued after 2005 are biometric. Canadian passports issued after 2013 are biometric. If your passport is older than these dates, check with your national passport authority and consider renewing before your trip.
If you registered with EES on a previous trip and then renew your passport before your next trip, your new passport is treated as a first-time registration. Your biometric data is re-linked to the new passport number, which means a full registration process again at the border. Allow extra time if you have recently renewed your passport.
Download the app (iOS and Android) before your trip. Check whether your destination country supports pre-enrollment. If it does, submit your passport details and complete facial biometrics in advance to speed up your kiosk time.
| Route | Extra Time Recommended |
|---|---|
| Flying into any Schengen airport | 60β90 min from landing to exit (first registration) |
| Eurostar from St Pancras | Arrive 90 min before departure (2 hrs during Easter/summer) |
| Eurotunnel Le Shuttle (Folkestone) | Add 45β60 min to normal arrival time |
| Port of Dover (Ferry) | Add 60β90 min to normal arrival time |
From April 10, admissibility questions are standard at most border points. Have these ready on your phone or in print:
If you have visited Europe since October 2025, your days are already logged in EES. Before your next trip, calculate how many days remain in your current 180-day window using the official tool at travel-europe.europa.eu.
Children of all ages need to go through EES. Children aged 12 and under are exempt from fingerprints but still require a facial scan. Parents must be present for their children’s registration. At busy airports, families with young children should request to go to a staffed booth rather than a self-service kiosk for the first registration.
EES is only the first of two major changes to European travel for non-EU visitors. The second β ETIAS (European Travel Information and Authorisation System) β is expected to launch in late 2026 with at least a six-month transitional grace period, meaning it likely becomes mandatory in 2027.
ETIAS works like the US ESTA or Australia’s ETA: a pre-travel online application completed before you leave home, costing β¬20 per application, valid for 3 years or until passport expires.
Important: ETIAS is NOT required yet. You do not need to apply for anything before your Europe trip in 2026 beyond completing EES at the border. Any website telling you to pay for an “ETIAS permit” right now is operating a scam.
The EU Entry/Exit System goes fully live in 9 days. For UK, Australian and Canadian citizens, this is the single biggest change to European travel since Brexit.
The process itself is straightforward β fingerprints, a facial scan, passport check β and once done, subsequent visits are significantly faster. But the first registration takes time, and April 10 coincides with Easter peak travel, the Spain airport strike, and the busiest school holiday period of the spring. The combination means queues at major European airports could be severe in the first two weeks.
No pre-registration needed. No fees. Just allow extra time β and have your trip documents ready.
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Posted By : Vinay
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