Does visiting multiple EU countries in succession require a multiple-entry Schengen visa?
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I plan to visit several Schengen countries in succession, e.g. Greece, Italy, Switzerland, Germany, and France, within a three-week period.
In other words, I plan to visit Greece and straight after Greece, I want to travel into Italy, and straight after Italy, I want to enter Switzerland, and so on.
Does my travel plan require multiple entries because my plan involves visiting a Schengen country and then leaving it to enter another Schengen country straight after?
Do I need a single-entry or multiple-entry visa?
I have tried to Google and search for the answer on StackExchange, but I just could not find a clear answer.
visas schengen europe multiple-entry
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up vote
3
down vote
favorite
I plan to visit several Schengen countries in succession, e.g. Greece, Italy, Switzerland, Germany, and France, within a three-week period.
In other words, I plan to visit Greece and straight after Greece, I want to travel into Italy, and straight after Italy, I want to enter Switzerland, and so on.
Does my travel plan require multiple entries because my plan involves visiting a Schengen country and then leaving it to enter another Schengen country straight after?
Do I need a single-entry or multiple-entry visa?
I have tried to Google and search for the answer on StackExchange, but I just could not find a clear answer.
visas schengen europe multiple-entry
add a comment |Â
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
I plan to visit several Schengen countries in succession, e.g. Greece, Italy, Switzerland, Germany, and France, within a three-week period.
In other words, I plan to visit Greece and straight after Greece, I want to travel into Italy, and straight after Italy, I want to enter Switzerland, and so on.
Does my travel plan require multiple entries because my plan involves visiting a Schengen country and then leaving it to enter another Schengen country straight after?
Do I need a single-entry or multiple-entry visa?
I have tried to Google and search for the answer on StackExchange, but I just could not find a clear answer.
visas schengen europe multiple-entry
I plan to visit several Schengen countries in succession, e.g. Greece, Italy, Switzerland, Germany, and France, within a three-week period.
In other words, I plan to visit Greece and straight after Greece, I want to travel into Italy, and straight after Italy, I want to enter Switzerland, and so on.
Does my travel plan require multiple entries because my plan involves visiting a Schengen country and then leaving it to enter another Schengen country straight after?
Do I need a single-entry or multiple-entry visa?
I have tried to Google and search for the answer on StackExchange, but I just could not find a clear answer.
visas schengen europe multiple-entry
edited Jul 11 at 7:06
Dirty-flow
10.2k1252109
10.2k1252109
asked Jul 11 at 2:34
user80275
183
183
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1 Answer
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The "number of entries" allowed by a Schengen visa concerns entries into the Schengen area as a whole. Traveling directly from one Schengen country to another does not count as an entry into the Schengen area.
From Annex VII of the Schengen Visa Code:
- âÂÂNUMBER OF ENTRIESâ heading:
This heading shows the number of times the visa holder may enter the territory for which the visa is valid, i.e. it refers to the number of periods of stay which may be spread over the entire period of validity, see 4.
When you travel directly from one Schengen country to another, you do not get an exit stamp or an entry stamp. You are not leaving or reentering "the territory for which the visa is valid."
Since Greece is not contiguous with the rest of the Schengen area, however, you must be certain that you travel directly to another Schengen country by air or by a ferry route that is not subject to passport control. If you have to pass through a passport checkpoint to leave Greece, you'll have to pass through another one to reenter the next Schengen country, and that will count as another entry.
Thank you. If I travel within the contiguous Schengen area, does it mean that there won't be passport controls?
â user80275
Jul 11 at 3:36
2
@user80275, there will be no systematic checks which put stamps on the passports, just random checks which look at the passport and visa. Depending on the border and your direction of travel (and also some racial profiling), these random checks can be done on almost all visitors or almost none. I recently passed from Germany to Poland and didn't even see a cop or customs officer, just some parked police cars with nobody inside. Italy to France is different.
â o.m.
Jul 11 at 5:03
add a comment |Â
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
5
down vote
accepted
The "number of entries" allowed by a Schengen visa concerns entries into the Schengen area as a whole. Traveling directly from one Schengen country to another does not count as an entry into the Schengen area.
From Annex VII of the Schengen Visa Code:
- âÂÂNUMBER OF ENTRIESâ heading:
This heading shows the number of times the visa holder may enter the territory for which the visa is valid, i.e. it refers to the number of periods of stay which may be spread over the entire period of validity, see 4.
When you travel directly from one Schengen country to another, you do not get an exit stamp or an entry stamp. You are not leaving or reentering "the territory for which the visa is valid."
Since Greece is not contiguous with the rest of the Schengen area, however, you must be certain that you travel directly to another Schengen country by air or by a ferry route that is not subject to passport control. If you have to pass through a passport checkpoint to leave Greece, you'll have to pass through another one to reenter the next Schengen country, and that will count as another entry.
Thank you. If I travel within the contiguous Schengen area, does it mean that there won't be passport controls?
â user80275
Jul 11 at 3:36
2
@user80275, there will be no systematic checks which put stamps on the passports, just random checks which look at the passport and visa. Depending on the border and your direction of travel (and also some racial profiling), these random checks can be done on almost all visitors or almost none. I recently passed from Germany to Poland and didn't even see a cop or customs officer, just some parked police cars with nobody inside. Italy to France is different.
â o.m.
Jul 11 at 5:03
add a comment |Â
up vote
5
down vote
accepted
The "number of entries" allowed by a Schengen visa concerns entries into the Schengen area as a whole. Traveling directly from one Schengen country to another does not count as an entry into the Schengen area.
From Annex VII of the Schengen Visa Code:
- âÂÂNUMBER OF ENTRIESâ heading:
This heading shows the number of times the visa holder may enter the territory for which the visa is valid, i.e. it refers to the number of periods of stay which may be spread over the entire period of validity, see 4.
When you travel directly from one Schengen country to another, you do not get an exit stamp or an entry stamp. You are not leaving or reentering "the territory for which the visa is valid."
Since Greece is not contiguous with the rest of the Schengen area, however, you must be certain that you travel directly to another Schengen country by air or by a ferry route that is not subject to passport control. If you have to pass through a passport checkpoint to leave Greece, you'll have to pass through another one to reenter the next Schengen country, and that will count as another entry.
Thank you. If I travel within the contiguous Schengen area, does it mean that there won't be passport controls?
â user80275
Jul 11 at 3:36
2
@user80275, there will be no systematic checks which put stamps on the passports, just random checks which look at the passport and visa. Depending on the border and your direction of travel (and also some racial profiling), these random checks can be done on almost all visitors or almost none. I recently passed from Germany to Poland and didn't even see a cop or customs officer, just some parked police cars with nobody inside. Italy to France is different.
â o.m.
Jul 11 at 5:03
add a comment |Â
up vote
5
down vote
accepted
up vote
5
down vote
accepted
The "number of entries" allowed by a Schengen visa concerns entries into the Schengen area as a whole. Traveling directly from one Schengen country to another does not count as an entry into the Schengen area.
From Annex VII of the Schengen Visa Code:
- âÂÂNUMBER OF ENTRIESâ heading:
This heading shows the number of times the visa holder may enter the territory for which the visa is valid, i.e. it refers to the number of periods of stay which may be spread over the entire period of validity, see 4.
When you travel directly from one Schengen country to another, you do not get an exit stamp or an entry stamp. You are not leaving or reentering "the territory for which the visa is valid."
Since Greece is not contiguous with the rest of the Schengen area, however, you must be certain that you travel directly to another Schengen country by air or by a ferry route that is not subject to passport control. If you have to pass through a passport checkpoint to leave Greece, you'll have to pass through another one to reenter the next Schengen country, and that will count as another entry.
The "number of entries" allowed by a Schengen visa concerns entries into the Schengen area as a whole. Traveling directly from one Schengen country to another does not count as an entry into the Schengen area.
From Annex VII of the Schengen Visa Code:
- âÂÂNUMBER OF ENTRIESâ heading:
This heading shows the number of times the visa holder may enter the territory for which the visa is valid, i.e. it refers to the number of periods of stay which may be spread over the entire period of validity, see 4.
When you travel directly from one Schengen country to another, you do not get an exit stamp or an entry stamp. You are not leaving or reentering "the territory for which the visa is valid."
Since Greece is not contiguous with the rest of the Schengen area, however, you must be certain that you travel directly to another Schengen country by air or by a ferry route that is not subject to passport control. If you have to pass through a passport checkpoint to leave Greece, you'll have to pass through another one to reenter the next Schengen country, and that will count as another entry.
edited Jul 11 at 3:19
answered Jul 11 at 3:03
phoog
60.6k9131189
60.6k9131189
Thank you. If I travel within the contiguous Schengen area, does it mean that there won't be passport controls?
â user80275
Jul 11 at 3:36
2
@user80275, there will be no systematic checks which put stamps on the passports, just random checks which look at the passport and visa. Depending on the border and your direction of travel (and also some racial profiling), these random checks can be done on almost all visitors or almost none. I recently passed from Germany to Poland and didn't even see a cop or customs officer, just some parked police cars with nobody inside. Italy to France is different.
â o.m.
Jul 11 at 5:03
add a comment |Â
Thank you. If I travel within the contiguous Schengen area, does it mean that there won't be passport controls?
â user80275
Jul 11 at 3:36
2
@user80275, there will be no systematic checks which put stamps on the passports, just random checks which look at the passport and visa. Depending on the border and your direction of travel (and also some racial profiling), these random checks can be done on almost all visitors or almost none. I recently passed from Germany to Poland and didn't even see a cop or customs officer, just some parked police cars with nobody inside. Italy to France is different.
â o.m.
Jul 11 at 5:03
Thank you. If I travel within the contiguous Schengen area, does it mean that there won't be passport controls?
â user80275
Jul 11 at 3:36
Thank you. If I travel within the contiguous Schengen area, does it mean that there won't be passport controls?
â user80275
Jul 11 at 3:36
2
2
@user80275, there will be no systematic checks which put stamps on the passports, just random checks which look at the passport and visa. Depending on the border and your direction of travel (and also some racial profiling), these random checks can be done on almost all visitors or almost none. I recently passed from Germany to Poland and didn't even see a cop or customs officer, just some parked police cars with nobody inside. Italy to France is different.
â o.m.
Jul 11 at 5:03
@user80275, there will be no systematic checks which put stamps on the passports, just random checks which look at the passport and visa. Depending on the border and your direction of travel (and also some racial profiling), these random checks can be done on almost all visitors or almost none. I recently passed from Germany to Poland and didn't even see a cop or customs officer, just some parked police cars with nobody inside. Italy to France is different.
â o.m.
Jul 11 at 5:03
add a comment |Â
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