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Oct 22, 2025

EU Entry/Exit System: First-Week Report Highlights Spain’s Smooth Airport Rollout

EU Entry/Exit System: First-Week Report Highlights Spain’s Smooth Airport Rollout
A legal briefing published on 22 October by EUCrim provides the first independent assessment of the European Union’s new Entry/Exit System (EES), which went live on 12 October. Spain—one of four early-adopter states—has so far avoided the three-hour queues reported in Brussels and Prague, thanks to €83 million invested in biometric kiosks at Madrid-Barajas and Barcelona-El Prat.

The EES records fingerprints and facial images of all non-EU travellers, replacing passport stamps. Spanish border police processed roughly 186,000 third-country nationals during the first ten days, with an average per-passenger processing time of 87 seconds at Madrid, according to interior-ministry data cited in the report. AENA credits pre-departure communications and “queue-busters” who guide passengers through the new kiosks.

The report notes two Spain-specific challenges ahead: expansion to land borders—including Gibraltar—and to busy cruise terminals, many of which still lack the required infrastructure. Implementation at seaports is slated for spring 2026.

For global mobility teams, the early data are encouraging, but the briefing advises building extra buffer time for travellers making their first post-EES entry into Spain, particularly over the year-end peak. Companies should also update employee travel guides to reflect biometric registration and data-privacy obligations.

The smooth Spanish start positions the country as a model for other Schengen airports racing to meet the EU’s April 2026 compliance deadline.
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