As an Aussie who plans to do this in the next few years, thank you for sharing. I was planning on bouncing between the UK, EU and a non-Schengen nation.
Good luck with your plans! That website definitely makes it easier to keep track. In real time, we're just about to bounce back out of Schengen again!!
Lots to think about for sure. Whoever said travel was always fun maybe have to rethink in view of changes. Loving your brilliant and informative videos.
@@nigelandsueadventures The UK was never part of the Schengen agreement so nothing to do with Brexit. Mind you, Brexit has certainly not made travelling between mainland Europe and the UK any easier, especially with the introduction of the electronic visas you had mentioned .... a well put together overview of the complexities of Schengen :)
Not mentioned here but there are a few european countries where Australians can get reciprocal visas utilising the visa rules in place before Schengen. To use them I believe you need to fly in/out an international airport because that's the only border check option you have to get the visa stamp. So in a future trip Nigel and Sue could fly out of Germany whilst Nigel is working, leaving the van in storage, then fly back to Germany and do a 6 week tour of just Germany on a reciprocal visa and it will not count as Schengen days. Then fly back out of Germany and then re-enter Europe under Schengen and go pick up the van.
Yes this is true and we have looked into it, however from what we’ve read it only covers you while in that country. Our plans are too fluid at this point!!
Thanks for this useful website. My husband and I are going to need this as we try to maximise the time we can spend in Europe over the next few years - we have four passports between us, but none of them are from Schengen countries!
When a tourist enters the Schengen Zone using a 90/180 day visa waiver they do not need to get a carnet for their vehicle or temporarily export it as they are expected to leave the zone with it. By leaving your van in Europe over your 90 days limit you risk being made to pay import duty on it and possibly being told that it will have to be registered in Italy before being driven any further. The chances of that being noticed are slight but that does not excuse ignoring the rules.
Yeah Jules, we knew about it, and have always planned our travel itinerary around the 90 day limit. A lot of other Aussies who are contemplating long term travel in Europe asked the question, so hopefully this has helped other people too!
If your storing your van. Put some sort of pest control in the van, make sure there are no holes/gaps they can get in. We had mice get in our van and chewed up all the upholstery and caused all sorts of other damage.
Great info and nice video. I'm planning to do a long trip when I retire, so I made some calculations on a spreadsheet to check if it was viable with this 90-day rule. I will probably do the same, getting to UK, Ireland, Montenegro, Turkey, and so on until counter allows to get back.
AUS/CAN/GB/US/NZ passports don't have fingerprints stored in their electronic chips, only facial recognition, and therefore, the holders' photos are now lasered onto a polycarbonic data-page in black and white in order to make it easier for the optical reader to get a good purchase of the determining facial features. Australia has adopted iris recognition which makes it easier to collect at airports.
Wow I didn’t know they had iris recognition! When the EES comes into effect our fingerprints will be taken the first time we go into the Schengen area, and then stored on a central computer. I saw the kiosks that will be in use for checking passport/face/fingerprints at Barcelona and Rome airports over the last 2 weeks. Roped off and waiting to be put in use!
This is a bit off track but Sue I’m wondering how you’re going in the van when Nigel is away working. It must be tricky with the added stress of this video content. Thank you for sharing.
I’m pretty used to it after almost four years! It was different this time as I was away from the van. We are all three back together now and it’s great!
Trying to live and travel 1 year in Europe for a Non-Schengen siticen could be wery hard. How ever Morocco in the winter. and when spring starts to arrive go to Algerie and Tunis. I gues it wil be some kind of ferry across from Tunis to Malta, then e few days in Italy and a ferry Italy to Albania and also a wisit to Montenegro and some other x-Yugoslavian countries in the spring. Could of course also go to turkie. Western part of Ukraine is quite safe and UK in the summer. We have some friends in New Zealand that went to UK, bought a camper and traveled Europe for a year, they prefered to buy a camper in UK so the steeringwhel would be on the right side, how ever, most of the time they where driving on the right, so steeringwheel on the right was totaly wrong for 80% of their stay. Today it must be, Go to Shengen, buy a camper, travel for 90 days, go to UK for 5 weeks, travel EU for 5 weeks, go to Morocco, Algeria and Tunis for 7 weeks then back into EU for 7 weeks wisit Albania and X-Yugoslavoa for 4 weeks and Turkie for 3,5 weeks, back into EU for 7,5 weeks. That is 52 weeks.
No each country has a limit depending on where the visitor's passport is from. The point is though, that in the Schengen area, the limit is for 29 countries, not just one. So if I spend 90 days in Italy, I cannot then go to Austria or Slovenia (or any other Schengen country) for 90 days... But if a European comes to Australia for 90 days (or whatever their limit is), they can then travel to New Zealand for 90 days.
Australia has bi lateral agreements with some european countries where you can spend an extra 90 days over and above the 90 day schengen allowance, worth checking out as i had advice from Italian consulate in brisbane that you can extend for a further 90 days in italy, i also believe there is an agreement with germany and a few other countries that potential gives you 180 days in total without leaving
There is no 90 day "Schengen allowance". The 90 day rule is valid for all EU countries, in or out of Schengen, and is similar to almost every country in the world.
I'd never go to Europe (in this lifetime) after living in Australia. So much here to do and see and the Great Dividing Range is great in NSW for motorcycle riding.
@@davidmatthews3093 Europe a beautiful part of mother Earth. It's just I'm happy hear. Best wishes though to anyone reading this in Europe. I wish you all the best.
Wow, what a pain. It used to be that you could just move from one country to the next and do 6 weeks in each. That's certainly what I did in the mid 1990s. You are very lucky to have a British passport Sue, though such a shame about Brexit, as you could have just stayed on in Europe had Brexit not happened, but better the UK than the cost of flying back to Australia. Turkiye would be a fabulous option to escape to, as not as yet in the EU. One of my favourite countries I have ever visited and Istanbul is probably my favourite of any capital city, other than Paris. Yep I love London, but Paris and Istanbul beat it on the beauty stakes and both have much better food than London!
Yes we spent most of the 90s in Europe and it was certainly easy for me and my British passport then! Luckily there’s beautiful Türkiye and a few of the Balkan countries we can still escape to!
Hi, just found your channel. We are Australian leaving for Europe in March 2025. How did you buy a car in Germany without a residential address or a residency visa. Were you able to because you hold an English passport? any help in this matter is greatly appreciated.
Hi Karen, we went through a German company called Car Turf (website is mycarturf dot com). Marcus took care of the rego and insurance after we found the van. We bought the van from a dealer called Best Car und Camper, near Wurzburg. Feel free to reach out via email if you have any further questions (hello at nigelandsueadventures dot com)
It’s an inconvenience but we can work around it. Thankfully there are still a few countries outside Schengen that we are really looking forward to visiting
Im so sorry for the loss of EU for you cuirios and open persons that want to explore Europé. And for me self that would like to travel round UK in my motorhome a full spring/sommar /vinter
It does not stop them from exploring Europe as there are some EU countries that are not in the Schengen Zone and others that are not in the EU. They just need to make sure that they are out of the Schengen Zone once their 90 days are up.
Well at least you didn't leave your camper at a French airport or you may have had to get it repaired due to lots of dents at least that is what I understand from watching Top Gear & The Grand Tour in regards to French parking/driving. :)
@@nigelandsueadventures Maybe chopper Nigel can get a job flying a helicopter in a Schengen country. Yes, Liechtenstein, Norway, and Switzerland. It's been a while, but Norway was amazing last I visited.
surely you need visas for the rest fo the world, so what, wheni travelled in europe years ago, i had to go through passport control each time,i didn tmind,
Permenant resident of where? And we don’t expect anyone to feel sorry for us! It’s not about feeling sorry, we’re simply explaining why we need to leave for a while and informing other non-European travellers, as there is a LOT of confusion around the 90/180 rule.
Remember next time you vote....... And it is not true, that there are no pasport controles inside of Schengen. There can be border controle, where you need to prove that you are a Schengen citizen. So just because you are in or from a Schengen country, you cant always just cross the border. Denmark and Germany are right now doing permanent border controle. You need to be a Schengen citizen to have the right to travel freely.
Brexit is a mess. To my fellow EU citizens: don't take for granted the precious rights you have - rights you may not fully appreciate until they're gone. The EU often gets bashed by governments that use it as a scapegoat for their own mismanagement. But the truth is, the EU is a remarkable organization that works to improve the lives of all Europeans. Brexit stripped British people of a fundamental right - not just the ability to visit freely, but also the freedom to work, live, or retire in any other EU country. Now, they are essentially "prisoners" on their own continent. And honestly, this isn’t even the biggest problem Brexit has caused for most Brits. The real issue lies in the friction and reduction in trade, which has led to a significant economic hit.
Stop whining about it, as most Europeans cannot even visit the countries you mention without a visa. If this is your problem with travelling in Europe please look the other way around ask if your way of treating visitors is better?
Just apply for a 1 year visa from one of the EU countries (France, Spain NLV, Greece FIP etc) Otherwise you can utilise bi-lateral agreements and stay in individual countries for 90days each.
The UK wasn’t part of Schengen, but as EU citizens, the British had the right to visit, work, live, and retire in any other EU country freely and without time limits. This is still the case for the Irish. Ireland is not part of Schengen either, but Irish citizens, as EU nationals, can move to other EU countries to live, work, and retire without needing permission or facing time limits. So I am afraid you are wrong: A LOT has changed because of Brexit. It is sad to see so many people voted without knowing what they were voting for.
There is no Schengen 90 day rule. It is an EU wide rule, and has zero to do with Schengen. The majority of countries in the world have a 90 day rule, the UK is one of the few outliers with a 180 day rule.
Ireland and Cyprus are in the EU and are not part of Schengen. Norway, Iceland, Liechtenstein and Switzerland are not EU states but are part of the Schengen Agreement. While it’s true that most countries allow visitors for 90 days, the difference is, for example, if a German passport holder visits Australia for 90 days, they can then go to New Zealand or Indonesia or any one of our close neighbours. If an Australian passport holder goes to Germany for 90 days, they need to leave the entire Schengen area for the next 90 days.
As an Aussie who plans to do this in the next few years, thank you for sharing. I was planning on bouncing between the UK, EU and a non-Schengen nation.
Good luck with your plans! That website definitely makes it easier to keep track. In real time, we're just about to bounce back out of Schengen again!!
Great information! Thanks Nigel and Sue 😊
Glad you found it useful!
Lots to think about for sure. Whoever said travel was always fun maybe have to rethink in view of changes. Loving your brilliant and informative videos.
Thanks! We're learning all the time too.
Aaaaah .... That's the simplest explanation I've seen. Good on you! 🤩
Yay! Thank you! 🙏 ☺️
nice info about the 90 day rule nigel and sue thanks again
You are very welcome!
It's lovely having two nationalities. I have a British passport and an Italian one, so no time limits for me!
Lucky you!!! That would be ideal.
@@nigelandsueadventures The UK was never part of the Schengen agreement so nothing to do with Brexit. Mind you, Brexit has certainly not made travelling between mainland Europe and the UK any easier, especially with the introduction of the electronic visas you had mentioned .... a well put together overview of the complexities of Schengen :)
@@petermckay4005 But while in EU UK citizens could enter the Schengen EU countries for any period of time just showing their passport once. - No more.
Not mentioned here but there are a few european countries where Australians can get reciprocal visas utilising the visa rules in place before Schengen. To use them I believe you need to fly in/out an international airport because that's the only border check option you have to get the visa stamp. So in a future trip Nigel and Sue could fly out of Germany whilst Nigel is working, leaving the van in storage, then fly back to Germany and do a 6 week tour of just Germany on a reciprocal visa and it will not count as Schengen days. Then fly back out of Germany and then re-enter Europe under Schengen and go pick up the van.
Yes this is true and we have looked into it, however from what we’ve read it only covers you while in that country. Our plans are too fluid at this point!!
ahh...now i get it..did wonder about from other peoples videos ,but its never been explained so simply ..thanks..safe travels
Glad it was helpful and simple to understand. Well, simpler!!
Thanks for this useful website. My husband and I are going to need this as we try to maximise the time we can spend in Europe over the next few years - we have four passports between us, but none of them are from Schengen countries!
Glad it was helpful!
When a tourist enters the Schengen Zone using a 90/180 day visa waiver they do not need to get a carnet for their vehicle or temporarily export it as they are expected to leave the zone with it. By leaving your van in Europe over your 90 days limit you risk being made to pay import duty on it and possibly being told that it will have to be registered in Italy before being driven any further. The chances of that being noticed are slight but that does not excuse ignoring the rules.
The van is registered in Germany, so it's a Schengen van!!
Omigawd! It’s doing my head in. Did you know about this before you started?
Yeah Jules, we knew about it, and have always planned our travel itinerary around the 90 day limit. A lot of other Aussies who are contemplating long term travel in Europe asked the question, so hopefully this has helped other people too!
Great video. I’ll definitely look into that 90/180 site
It’s so easy!! Keeps us organised and within our allowance
Lots of great information, thank you
You are very welcome!
If your storing your van. Put some sort of pest control in the van, make sure there are no holes/gaps they can get in. We had mice get in our van and chewed up all the upholstery and caused all sorts of other damage.
We do have these anti-rodent things in the engine bay. Thankfully no rodents got in!
Drop in to Malaysia for another 90 days!
Great info and nice video. I'm planning to do a long trip when I retire, so I made some calculations on a spreadsheet to check if it was viable with this 90-day rule. I will probably do the same, getting to UK, Ireland, Montenegro, Turkey, and so on until counter allows to get back.
Sounds like a good plan! Bookmark that website, it will certainly help with your calculations once you’re on the road.
Couter? 🤷♂️
@@grahameroberts8109 "counter", my laptop keyboard is faiiling sometimes and I'm 52 and don't wear glasses, so my eyes are failing sometimes as well.
AUS/CAN/GB/US/NZ passports don't have fingerprints stored in their electronic chips, only facial recognition, and therefore, the holders' photos are now lasered onto a polycarbonic data-page in black and white in order to make it easier for the optical reader to get a good purchase of the determining facial features. Australia has adopted iris recognition which makes it easier to collect at airports.
Wow I didn’t know they had iris recognition! When the EES comes into effect our fingerprints will be taken the first time we go into the Schengen area, and then stored on a central computer. I saw the kiosks that will be in use for checking passport/face/fingerprints at Barcelona and Rome airports over the last 2 weeks. Roped off and waiting to be put in use!
Yep. Rome is not the South Tirol as you can see... Well, have a nice break from Shengen an is crazy rules! See you in Rome next time! 😉👍
It's good to be back!!
Well darn that puts a dark cloud on your sunshine.
Looking forward to more sunshine soon!!
This is a bit off track but Sue I’m wondering how you’re going in the van when Nigel is away working. It must be tricky with the added stress of this video content. Thank you for sharing.
I’m pretty used to it after almost four years! It was different this time as I was away from the van. We are all three back together now and it’s great!
Try going to Montenegro for a few weeks and then into Albania (both outside the schengen) until 91 days are up and then head back to the Schengen.
Yes we plan to visit both those countries in the new year!
Trying to live and travel 1 year in Europe for a Non-Schengen siticen could be wery hard. How ever Morocco in the winter. and when spring starts to arrive go to Algerie and Tunis. I gues it wil be some kind of ferry across from Tunis to Malta, then e few days in Italy and a ferry Italy to Albania and also a wisit to Montenegro and some other x-Yugoslavian countries in the spring. Could of course also go to turkie. Western part of Ukraine is quite safe and UK in the summer. We have some friends in New Zealand that went to UK, bought a camper and traveled Europe for a year, they prefered to buy a camper in UK so the steeringwhel would be on the right side, how ever, most of the time they where driving on the right, so steeringwheel on the right was totaly wrong for 80% of their stay. Today it must be, Go to Shengen, buy a camper, travel for 90 days, go to UK for 5 weeks, travel EU for 5 weeks, go to Morocco, Algeria and Tunis for 7 weeks then back into EU for 7 weeks wisit Albania and X-Yugoslavoa for 4 weeks and Turkie for 3,5 weeks, back into EU for 7,5 weeks. That is 52 weeks.
In US is it different? As european I can stay in US o in Australia for the time that I Want ?
No each country has a limit depending on where the visitor's passport is from. The point is though, that in the Schengen area, the limit is for 29 countries, not just one. So if I spend 90 days in Italy, I cannot then go to Austria or Slovenia (or any other Schengen country) for 90 days... But if a European comes to Australia for 90 days (or whatever their limit is), they can then travel to New Zealand for 90 days.
Australia has bi lateral agreements with some european countries where you can spend an extra 90 days over and above the 90 day schengen allowance, worth checking out as i had advice from Italian consulate in brisbane that you can extend for a further 90 days in italy, i also believe there is an agreement with germany and a few other countries that potential gives you 180 days in total without leaving
There is no 90 day "Schengen allowance". The 90 day rule is valid for all EU countries, in or out of Schengen, and is similar to almost every country in the world.
Thank you for the very clear explanation of this Kafkaesque system, which seems to have no logic or rationale behind it. Safe travels!
I'd never go to Europe (in this lifetime) after living in Australia. So much here to do and see and the Great Dividing Range is great in NSW for motorcycle riding.
Australia is a beautiful country and there are so many beautiful places in the world.
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Not a fan of history and culture then? Europe offers so much that Australia cannot.
@@davidmatthews3093 Europe a beautiful part of mother Earth. It's just I'm happy hear. Best wishes though to anyone reading this in Europe. I wish you all the best.
Wow, what a pain. It used to be that you could just move from one country to the next and do 6 weeks in each. That's certainly what I did in the mid 1990s. You are very lucky to have a British passport Sue, though such a shame about Brexit, as you could have just stayed on in Europe had Brexit not happened, but better the UK than the cost of flying back to Australia. Turkiye would be a fabulous option to escape to, as not as yet in the EU. One of my favourite countries I have ever visited and Istanbul is probably my favourite of any capital city, other than Paris. Yep I love London, but Paris and Istanbul beat it on the beauty stakes and both have much better food than London!
Yes we spent most of the 90s in Europe and it was certainly easy for me and my British passport then! Luckily there’s beautiful Türkiye and a few of the Balkan countries we can still escape to!
It's the same for EU citizens visiting Australia (90 days)
Hi, just found your channel. We are Australian leaving for Europe in March 2025. How did you buy a car in Germany without a residential address or a residency visa. Were you able to because you hold an English passport? any help in this matter is greatly appreciated.
Hi Karen, we went through a German company called Car Turf (website is mycarturf dot com). Marcus took care of the rego and insurance after we found the van. We bought the van from a dealer called Best Car und Camper, near Wurzburg. Feel free to reach out via email if you have any further questions (hello at nigelandsueadventures dot com)
Good info thanks. It is confusing.
It's not easy to figure out, that's for sure! Glad this was helpful.
I knew there had to be a catch!
It’s an inconvenience but we can work around it. Thankfully there are still a few countries outside Schengen that we are really looking forward to visiting
0:58 you forgot UK who decided to be outsiders, and Ireland who had no choice.
Im so sorry for the loss of EU for you cuirios and open persons that want to explore Europé. And for me self that would like to travel round UK in my motorhome a full spring/sommar /vinter
It does not stop them from exploring Europe as there are some EU countries that are not in the Schengen Zone and others that are not in the EU. They just need to make sure that they are out of the Schengen Zone once their 90 days are up.
Exactly right!
Yay 1st to comment!!! 😃
Thank you! We appreciate you watching!
I don’t even know what a Schengen is lol . I guess it is because I am from Australia .
Unless you have an EU passport, the rules would apply to you as an Aussie if you visit Europe.
Well at least you didn't leave your camper at a French airport or you may have had to get it repaired due to lots of dents at least that is what I understand from watching Top Gear & The Grand Tour in regards to French parking/driving. :)
Yes it’s a nightmare! Especially for a big vehicle. We parked it way down the back, so hopefully, no damage… see next week.
Glad I got a maltese Passport 🎉
Lucky you!!
Everything that challenges the establishment eventually gets knocked down.
That's what you want.
My son and daughter in law planned their European trip so they spent parts of their trip in non Schengen European countries resetting the 90 day rule
Yes there’s definitely a lot of planning required. We will be here for a couple of years, do we are carefully counting days wherever we go
How great is that that we UK Australians can have dual citizenship ❤
Yes and my son has gotten his UK passport based on mine and is able to live in London indefinitely
Weird system indeed.
EES = Digital ID
Nigel doesn't get to drink for 6 weeks.
When I worked in Saudi if you didn't go there an alcoholic...you came home one 😅
were you drinking moonshine?
I wonder if all the BREXIT supporters knew about this. I guess if you always find house sitting gigs in the UK then you are probably ok.
There’s some really interesting countries to visit in the Balkans that are still outside Schengen too!
@@nigelandsueadventures Maybe chopper Nigel can get a job flying a helicopter in a Schengen country. Yes, Liechtenstein, Norway, and Switzerland. It's been a while, but Norway was amazing last I visited.
What a palava!
Very crap indeed!
Which one of you two don't like heights? Stu
Ironically, that would be the one who works as a Helicopter Pilot!! (Nigel)
@@nigelandsueadventures - ha ha. That was what I was thinking. I think you said something about heights in the Dolomites.
Anyone watching here who voted to leave the EU? Many thanks, again.
Yep. 100%
surely you need visas for the rest fo the world, so what, wheni travelled in europe years ago, i had to go through passport control each time,i didn tmind,
Of course! Visas are an inevitable part of travelling.
It is a challenge for me to feel sorry gor you. But with your British passports you can apply for a permanent resident card.
Permenant resident of where? And we don’t expect anyone to feel sorry for us! It’s not about feeling sorry, we’re simply explaining why we need to leave for a while and informing other non-European travellers, as there is a LOT of confusion around the 90/180 rule.
Remember next time you vote.......
And it is not true, that there are no pasport controles inside of Schengen. There can be border controle, where you need to prove that you are a Schengen citizen. So just because you are in or from a Schengen country, you cant always just cross the border. Denmark and Germany are right now doing permanent border controle. You need to be a Schengen citizen to have the right to travel freely.
Brexit is a mess. To my fellow EU citizens: don't take for granted the precious rights you have - rights you may not fully appreciate until they're gone. The EU often gets bashed by governments that use it as a scapegoat for their own mismanagement. But the truth is, the EU is a remarkable organization that works to improve the lives of all Europeans.
Brexit stripped British people of a fundamental right - not just the ability to visit freely, but also the freedom to work, live, or retire in any other EU country. Now, they are essentially "prisoners" on their own continent.
And honestly, this isn’t even the biggest problem Brexit has caused for most Brits. The real issue lies in the friction and reduction in trade, which has led to a significant economic hit.
And perhaps importing millions of thirdworlders in a few years didnt help them out??
WHY,IN YOUR COUNTRY IS NOT HE SAME LOW ??NOBODY MUST STAY INAN EUROPA COUNTRY MORE THEN 90.DAYS,S RIGHT SO!!!!!
She's only making plans for Nigel.....
Bahahahaha
Stop whining about it, as most Europeans cannot even visit the countries you mention without a visa. If this is your problem with travelling in Europe please look the other way around ask if your way of treating visitors is better?
U.K,OUT FROM EUROP SO OUT FROM SHEGEN !!!
Just apply for a 1 year visa from one of the EU countries (France, Spain NLV, Greece FIP etc)
Otherwise you can utilise bi-lateral agreements and stay in individual countries for 90days each.
Brexiters are affected - they knew what they were voting for .... hahaha
It’s the BREXIT stupid!
UK wasnt in Schengen when it was in the EU. So brexit didnt change that
No but as part of the EU a UK passport holder could travel freely within the zone without any 90 day restrictions.
Brexit most certainly did change this. The customs union was specifically linked to the free movement of people.
The UK wasn’t part of Schengen, but as EU citizens, the British had the right to visit, work, live, and retire in any other EU country freely and without time limits. This is still the case for the Irish. Ireland is not part of Schengen either, but Irish citizens, as EU nationals, can move to other EU countries to live, work, and retire without needing permission or facing time limits. So I am afraid you are wrong: A LOT has changed because of Brexit. It is sad to see so many people voted without knowing what they were voting for.
I would just stay for 90 days because you can see a lot and then I would return to Australia , my home for ever !
Are you being serious ?😂😂😂another brexiter trying to say he didn’t do anything wrong
There is no Schengen 90 day rule.
It is an EU wide rule, and has zero to do with Schengen.
The majority of countries in the world have a 90 day rule, the UK is one of the few outliers with a 180 day rule.
Ireland and Cyprus are in the EU and are not part of Schengen.
Norway, Iceland, Liechtenstein and Switzerland are not EU states but are part of the Schengen Agreement.
While it’s true that most countries allow visitors for 90 days, the difference is, for example, if a German passport holder visits Australia for 90 days, they can then go to New Zealand or Indonesia or any one of our close neighbours.
If an Australian passport holder goes to Germany for 90 days, they need to leave the entire Schengen area for the next 90 days.
@nigelandsueadventures of course they do, since the Schengen zone counts as one. Just like Australia does, or the 50 states of the USA.
@@ab-ym3bf You really are quite dense
Just don't get your passport stamped
The. It’s impossible to prove you’ve only been in there for under 90 days, so they start asking to see your bank statements!
That's a dumb idea