Can Americans Travel to Europe Without a Visa in 2026?

Last Updated: February 2026

Yes — Americans can still travel to most of Europe without a visa in 2026. But the rules are about to change. A new system called ETIAS will require US citizens to get pre-travel authorization before visiting Europe starting late this year. Here’s everything you need to know.

⚡ The Short Answer

US citizens can visit 29 European countries for up to 90 days without a visa. Starting Q4 2026, you’ll also need an ETIAS authorization (€20, applied online). The 90-day limit and visa-free status aren’t changing — ETIAS is just an added screening step.

What Americans Can Do Right Now (2026)

As of February 2026, US passport holders can enter the Schengen Area — a zone of 29 European countries with shared border controls — without any visa or pre-authorization. You show your passport at the border, get processed through the Entry/Exit System (EES), and you’re in.

The only limit is time: you can spend a maximum of 90 days within any rolling 180-day period across all 29 Schengen countries combined. This is known as the 90/180-day rule.

That means 90 days total across France, Spain, Italy, Germany, Greece, Portugal, and every other Schengen country — not 90 days per country.

What’s Changing: ETIAS

ETIAS (European Travel Information and Authorisation System) is expected to launch in Q4 2026 (October–December). It’s Europe’s version of the American ESTA or Canada’s eTA.

Here’s what it means for Americans (for the full deep dive, see our ETIAS for US Citizens guide):

Before your trip, you’ll fill out an online form with basic personal information — name, passport details, travel plans, health and security questions. You’ll pay a one-time fee of €20 (free if you’re under 18 or over 70).

Most applications are approved within minutes. In some cases, processing can take up to 30 days if additional screening is needed.

Once approved, your ETIAS is valid for 3 years (or until your passport expires, whichever comes first). You can use it for unlimited trips to Europe during that period.

ETIAS does not change the 90-day limit. You still get 90 days per 180-day rolling window. ETIAS simply adds a pre-screening step — it doesn’t give you more time or different privileges.

What ETIAS Is NOT

ETIAS is not a visa. There’s no embassy appointment, no interview, no stack of documents. It’s a quick online form. Americans are not losing their visa-free status — ETIAS is an authorization layer on top of the existing visa-free arrangement.

Think of it like TSA PreCheck for entering Europe: a background screening that happens before you fly, not a visa application.

⚠️ Scam Warning

ETIAS is not yet live as of February 2026. The only official ETIAS website will be travel-europe.europa.eu/etias. Any website currently claiming to process ETIAS applications is charging you for nothing. Do not pay anyone for ETIAS until the official EU portal launches.

The 90-Day Limit: How It Actually Works

This is where most Americans get tripped up. The 90-day limit isn’t as simple as “three months in, three months out.”

The rule uses a rolling 180-day window. On any given day, the system looks back at the previous 180 days and counts how many of those you spent inside the Schengen Area. If the count is 90 or more, you can’t enter.

This means:

You can’t just leave for a weekend and come back with fresh days. A quick trip to London or Istanbul doesn’t reset anything. Your days only “expire” as they fall off the back end of the 180-day lookback period.

All Schengen countries share one pool. Two weeks in France + three weeks in Italy + a month in Spain = about 63 days used from your single 90-day allowance.

The Entry/Exit System tracks this automatically. When you arrive at a European airport, the border system instantly shows how many days you’ve used and how many remain. There’s no ambiguity.

Use our Schengen Calculator to check your remaining days before booking flights.

Which European Countries Can Americans Visit Visa-Free?

Schengen Area (90-day limit, ETIAS required once it launches)

Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland.

All 29 countries share the 90/180-day clock.

Non-Schengen European Countries (separate rules)

Americans can also visit many European countries outside the Schengen Area with their own visa-free allowances — and time in these countries does NOT count toward your Schengen 90 days:

Country Visa-Free Stay for US Citizens
United Kingdom 6 months
Ireland 90 days
Turkey 90 days per 180 (e-visa required)
Albania 1 year
Serbia 90 days
Montenegro 90 days
Georgia 1 year
Kosovo 90 days
North Macedonia 90 days
Bosnia & Herzegovina 90 days
Moldova 90 days per 180

This is why many long-term travelers alternate between Schengen and non-Schengen countries to maximize their time in Europe. Spend 90 days in the Schengen Area, then head to the Balkans, Turkey, or the UK while your Schengen days replenish.

What Americans Need at the Border

When arriving in Europe, US citizens should have:

A valid US passport. It must be valid for at least 3 months beyond your planned departure from the Schengen Area. Some countries recommend 6 months of validity — check before you go.

Proof of onward travel. Not always asked for, but border agents can request evidence that you plan to leave within 90 days — a return flight, an onward ticket, or a reasonable itinerary.

Proof of sufficient funds. Again, rarely enforced for Americans, but border agents have the right to ask you to demonstrate you can support yourself during your stay. A credit card and a reasonable bank balance are typically sufficient.

Travel insurance. Not legally required for visa-free American travelers, but strongly recommended. A medical emergency in Europe without insurance can cost thousands of dollars. Travel medical insurance from providers like SafetyWing starts at about $56 per 4 weeks and covers you across all of Europe.

ETIAS authorization — once the system launches (expected Q4 2026). Until then, no pre-authorization is needed.

What If You Want to Stay Longer Than 90 Days?

If 90 days isn’t enough, you have options — but they all require paperwork:

Digital nomad visa. Several European countries now offer visas specifically for remote workers. Portugal, Spain, Greece, Croatia, and Estonia are popular choices. Income requirements vary from about €2,500 to €4,500/month. Read our digital nomad guide for details.

Long-stay visa (Type D). For work, study, retirement, or family reunification. Applied for through the embassy of the specific country you want to live in.

Use non-Schengen countries strategically. Spend your 90 Schengen days, then head to Albania (1 year visa-free), Georgia (1 year), Turkey (90 days), or the UK (6 months). Your Schengen clock pauses while you’re outside the zone.

Need Help With Visa Requirements?

Whether it’s a Turkey e-visa, a digital nomad visa, or checking entry requirements for any country — iVisa can help.

Check Your Requirements →

Frequently Asked Questions

Do Americans need a visa for Europe in 2026?
No. US citizens travel to the Schengen Area visa-free. Starting late 2026, you’ll need an ETIAS authorization (€20 online form), but that’s not a visa.

How long can Americans stay in Europe?
90 days within any rolling 180-day period in the Schengen Area. Non-Schengen European countries have their own separate limits (see table above).

Can I work remotely in Europe as an American tourist?
It’s a gray area. You’re not taking a local job, but you’re also not purely a tourist. For short stays, it’s widely tolerated. For longer stays, a digital nomad visa gives you legal clarity.

What happens if I stay more than 90 days?
Overstay consequences include fines (€500–€10,000+ depending on the country), possible deportation, and entry bans of 1–5 years across all 29 Schengen countries.

Does the UK count toward my 90 Schengen days?
No. The UK is not in the Schengen Area. Time spent in the UK has its own separate allowance (6 months for Americans). Same for Ireland, Turkey, and the Balkans.

I have dual citizenship (US + EU country). Do I need ETIAS?
No. Enter on your EU passport and you have full free movement rights. You don’t need ETIAS or any authorization.

Is my US passport enough, or do I need anything else?
Your passport is sufficient for entry right now. Make sure it’s valid for at least 3 months past your planned departure date. Once ETIAS launches, you’ll need that too.

When does ETIAS start?
ETIAS is expected to launch in Q4 2026 (October–December). The EU has delayed it multiple times, so the exact date may shift. We’ll update this page when it’s confirmed.


Disclaimer: This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or immigration advice. Entry requirements can change. Always verify current rules with official sources before traveling. Last updated: February 2026.