For business travelers

Three trips a month adds up faster than you think.

Frequent short trips create real day-count exposure: personal tax residency, employer reporting, per-diem records, and Schengen limits. DaysAbroad keeps the log while you travel.

CSV export preview

month,country,days,purpose
Jan,DE,3,Business
Feb,FR,4,Business
Mar,ES,2,Business
Apr,NL,5,Business

The short-trip problem

Every two-day trip is still a day-count record.

The hard part is not one long stay. It is many small trips that look harmless until someone asks for a country-by-country total.

Jan Frankfurt 3 days Business
Feb Paris 4 days Business
Mar Madrid 2 days Business
Apr Amsterdam 5 days Business
May Milan 3 days Conference

What business travelers use this for

Tax

Year-end day counts without boarding-pass archaeology.

If your accountant asks for country totals, you export the record instead of rebuilding it from calendars.

Employer

Reporting that matches the trips you actually took.

Trip purpose tags and CSV export make finance, mobility, and tax-equalization workflows less fragile.

Schengen

Short EU trips still count against the same 90 days.

Three days in Frankfurt, four in Paris, two in Madrid: the rolling window adds them all together.

Get DaysAbroad

A timestamped log for every trip.

Free for two countries. Pro unlocks unlimited tracking, multi-year history, and CSV export your accountant will actually read.