
Majorca Daily Bulletin reports that Spain’s early adoption of the EU Entry/Exit System has detected more than 4,000 British nationals who exceeded the Schengen 90/180-day limit since the system went live in October 2025. With full enforcement scheduled EU-wide on 10 April, officials warn that automated alerts will replace discretionary passport-stamp checks.(majorcadailybulletin.com)
George Cremer, founder of compliance app Schengen Simple, told the paper that many travellers still misunderstand the rolling-window calculation. The digital system now flags every biometric departure and automatically issues a potential fine or re-entry ban notice, leaving little room for negotiation at the border.
For anyone anxious about navigating these stricter controls, VisaHQ offers an easy way to check your permissible stay and obtain the right paperwork before departure. Their Spain portal (https://www.visahq.com/spain/) includes a free Schengen day calculator, personalised overstay alerts and concierge assistance for visa extensions or residence permits, helping both tourists and business travellers stay compliant.
Implications for employers: assignees on short-term projects who previously relied on multiple 89-day trips must start counting days across all 29 Schengen states, not just Spain. HR should integrate automated trackers into travel-approval workflows and include buffer days for unforeseen stopovers that consume allowance.
Spanish police confirmed they will initially focus on education rather than penalties, but repeat offenders face fines up to €10,000 or a multi-year Schengen ban. Travel managers should brief UK-based staff ahead of the Easter getaway and ensure passports are stamped on exit from non-EES ports such as Morocco to reset the clock.
The article notes that several EU countries are lobbying Brussels to suspend EES during summer peaks, but Spain has so far resisted, citing the need for “equal treatment at all borders.”
George Cremer, founder of compliance app Schengen Simple, told the paper that many travellers still misunderstand the rolling-window calculation. The digital system now flags every biometric departure and automatically issues a potential fine or re-entry ban notice, leaving little room for negotiation at the border.
For anyone anxious about navigating these stricter controls, VisaHQ offers an easy way to check your permissible stay and obtain the right paperwork before departure. Their Spain portal (https://www.visahq.com/spain/) includes a free Schengen day calculator, personalised overstay alerts and concierge assistance for visa extensions or residence permits, helping both tourists and business travellers stay compliant.
Implications for employers: assignees on short-term projects who previously relied on multiple 89-day trips must start counting days across all 29 Schengen states, not just Spain. HR should integrate automated trackers into travel-approval workflows and include buffer days for unforeseen stopovers that consume allowance.
Spanish police confirmed they will initially focus on education rather than penalties, but repeat offenders face fines up to €10,000 or a multi-year Schengen ban. Travel managers should brief UK-based staff ahead of the Easter getaway and ensure passports are stamped on exit from non-EES ports such as Morocco to reset the clock.
The article notes that several EU countries are lobbying Brussels to suspend EES during summer peaks, but Spain has so far resisted, citing the need for “equal treatment at all borders.”