Schengen 90/180 · 183-day rules · CSV export

Avoid Schengen and tax-residency mistakes.

DaysAbroad automatically tracks where you spend each day, so your Schengen 90/180, 183-day tax-residency, and country-history records stay current without a spreadsheet.

Get DaysAbroad — free Download on the App Store Free to try · No signup · iOS 16+ · Travel data stays on-device
Check Schengen days
DaysAbroad iPhone dashboard showing 2026 travel progress, countries, trips, and country breakdown.

Day-counting risk

One missed day can become a border, tax, or records problem.

Spreadsheets work until they do not. Entry days, exit days, layovers, overnight crossings, and rolling Schengen windows are exactly where manual records drift.

Schengen 90/180

You get 90 days in any rolling 180-day window across 29 countries combined. The window moves every day, and overstays can mean fines, removal, or a multi-year Schengen entry ban.

183-day tax rules

Most countries start asking tax-residency questions once you spend 183 days there. Some use lower tie-based tests.

Forgotten travel days

Entry days, exit days, layovers, and overnight border crossings are exactly where manual spreadsheets drift.

Audit records

Border and tax authorities use their records. DaysAbroad gives you your own country-by-country timeline.

How it works

Four steps. One permission prompt. Then it runs itself.

Most users finish setup before their next flight boards.

  1. 01

    Let your phone count.

    One location permission. DaysAbroad runs quietly in the background and logs the country for each day.

  2. 02

    Watch the number that matters.

    See days per country, Schengen days used, and the date where a limit gets uncomfortable.

  3. 03

    Fix edge cases fast.

    Open any country, review the month-by-month breakdown, and correct a missed day in two taps.

  4. 04

    Export when asked.

    CSV and JSON exports are ready for accountants, visa paperwork, or your own archive.

Free tool · no signup

Need an answer right now? Use the free Schengen calculator.

Enter recent trips and see days used, days remaining, and when days start freeing up. Then use DaysAbroad to keep the count current automatically.

The calculator answers today's question. The app keeps tomorrow's count updated.

Try the Schengen calculator

Pricing

Free helps you try the workflow. Pro protects the record you may need later.

Track your 2026 travel before tax-year close. Pro starts with a 14-day free trial.

See full pricing →

Free

$0 forever

Try the workflow with two countries, manual entry, current-year tracking, and iCloud backup.

Download on the App Store

No signup · iPhone only

Recommended

Pro · Yearly

$23.99 / year

14-day free trial · capture this year's travel before it becomes reconstruction work

Download on the App Store

iOS 16+ · Android planned for 2027

  • Track every country in one timeline
  • Let background GPS build the day log
  • Get warned before Schengen gets tight
  • Keep records across tax years
  • Label travel by purpose for cleaner records
  • Export CSV and JSON when paperwork asks

FAQ

Questions, asked early.

Does DaysAbroad drain my battery?
No. DaysAbroad uses iOS significant-location monitoring rather than continuous GPS. The phone wakes it only when location meaningfully changes.
Is my travel history sent to DaysAbroad?
No. Travel data stays on your device. Optional iCloud backup goes to your Apple account, not to DaysAbroad servers. For privacy-rights requests under GDPR, CCPA, or similar laws, email [email protected].
Can I export my history?
Yes. Pro includes CSV and JSON export from Settings → Data. The files are plain text, so accountants, visa paperwork, Excel, Numbers, or your own archive can read them.
What if I forget my phone or it dies?
DaysAbroad cannot log a border crossing while the phone is off, out of battery, or left behind. You can manually add or correct days afterward from passport stamps, boarding passes, or calendar records.
Does DaysAbroad give tax or immigration advice?
No. DaysAbroad counts days and explains common rules; it is not legal, tax, or immigration advice. Your decisions still belong with official sources and qualified advisors.