
Germany has taken its first concrete step toward the European Union’s long-awaited Entry/Exit System (EES). On 29 October 2025 Frankfurt Airport switched several border-control lanes to the new fully digital regime for travellers from outside the Schengen area. Instead of a manual passport stamp, the system captures four fingerprints, a live facial image and the traveller’s passport data at 218 self-service kiosks that feed information directly to the Federal Police border officers. Düsseldorf Airport launched an identical pilot earlier this month, and all other German external borders are due to follow over the next six months.
The change ends a ritual familiar to millions of business travellers: collecting passport stamps on every trip. For companies that rotate staff in and out of Germany on short-term assignments, the removal of physical stamping means one less compliance document to copy and archive. Instead, travel histories will be stored electronically for three years and made available to immigration authorities across the Schengen zone, closing loopholes that previously allowed non-EU nationals to over-stay the 90/180-day rule.
EU officials say the biometric database will strengthen security by flagging forged documents and identity fraud in real time. Critics, however, warn of teething problems—longer queues during the learning phase, data-protection risks, and costly kiosk retrofits for airports. Frankfurt operator Fraport says it set aside space for all 218 kiosks and expects normal processing times once passengers become familiar with self-service enrolment. Companies are being advised to brief travelling staff on the new requirement and to factor an extra 15–20 minutes into first-time arrivals.
Looking ahead, the EES is a prerequisite for ETIAS, the EU’s electronic travel authorisation that will apply to visa-waiver visitors from 2026. German border police say that, once all systems are live, they will be able to identify over-stays instantly and automate fines or entry bans. Multinationals that rely on short-term commuters should therefore audit duty-travel tracking tools now to avoid inadvertent breaches once the grace period ends in April 2026.
The change ends a ritual familiar to millions of business travellers: collecting passport stamps on every trip. For companies that rotate staff in and out of Germany on short-term assignments, the removal of physical stamping means one less compliance document to copy and archive. Instead, travel histories will be stored electronically for three years and made available to immigration authorities across the Schengen zone, closing loopholes that previously allowed non-EU nationals to over-stay the 90/180-day rule.
EU officials say the biometric database will strengthen security by flagging forged documents and identity fraud in real time. Critics, however, warn of teething problems—longer queues during the learning phase, data-protection risks, and costly kiosk retrofits for airports. Frankfurt operator Fraport says it set aside space for all 218 kiosks and expects normal processing times once passengers become familiar with self-service enrolment. Companies are being advised to brief travelling staff on the new requirement and to factor an extra 15–20 minutes into first-time arrivals.
Looking ahead, the EES is a prerequisite for ETIAS, the EU’s electronic travel authorisation that will apply to visa-waiver visitors from 2026. German border police say that, once all systems are live, they will be able to identify over-stays instantly and automate fines or entry bans. Multinationals that rely on short-term commuters should therefore audit duty-travel tracking tools now to avoid inadvertent breaches once the grace period ends in April 2026.









