
The European Union’s biometric Entry/Exit System (EES) will become fully operational at all 29 Schengen external borders on 10 April 2026, according to an EMEA immigration bulletin released 6 April. The EES will replace passport stamping and automatically record each non-EU national’s movements, capturing facial images and—where travellers enter visa-free—four fingerprints. For Indian citizens the change has two main impacts. First, travellers with a Schengen C visa will only have their facial photo taken, but must expect longer queues while the system verifies biometrics. Second, Indians connecting air-side through hubs such as Frankfurt or Paris remain exempt from EES processing, but anyone entering the Schengen Area to stay—whether on business or tourism—will be enrolled. Because the system enforces the 90/180-day rule algorithmically, overstays will now auto-trigger fines or future-entry bans.
For those seeking practical help with paperwork and day-count calculations, VisaHQ provides an India-specific portal (https://www.visahq.com/india/) that guides travellers through Schengen visa options, tracks accrued days and offers alert services to stay clear of inadvertent overstays.
Employers rotating staff through Europe on frequent short trips should audit historical passport stamps and consider digital tracking tools to avoid inadvertent non-compliance. Travellers with henna-dyed fingertips or recent finger injuries should carry medical or photographic evidence to explain mismatches. Airports are installing self-service kiosks similar to e-gates seen in Australia and Singapore, but early-phase teething troubles are likely. Mobility advisers recommend arriving at least one extra hour before departure during the first weeks of implementation and briefing travellers on the new process to reduce anxiety at border control.
For those seeking practical help with paperwork and day-count calculations, VisaHQ provides an India-specific portal (https://www.visahq.com/india/) that guides travellers through Schengen visa options, tracks accrued days and offers alert services to stay clear of inadvertent overstays.
Employers rotating staff through Europe on frequent short trips should audit historical passport stamps and consider digital tracking tools to avoid inadvertent non-compliance. Travellers with henna-dyed fingertips or recent finger injuries should carry medical or photographic evidence to explain mismatches. Airports are installing self-service kiosks similar to e-gates seen in Australia and Singapore, but early-phase teething troubles are likely. Mobility advisers recommend arriving at least one extra hour before departure during the first weeks of implementation and briefing travellers on the new process to reduce anxiety at border control.