Concept Entity · Topic Hub
Schengen Area (29 Countries)
Definition
The Schengen Area is a 29-country zone of free movement across European member states, having abolished internal border controls. Includes France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Greece, and others. Greek Golden Visa holders may travel visa-free across all 29 Schengen countries, with a maximum stay of 90 days in any 180-day period. As of 2026, the most recent additions are Bulgaria and Romania (March 2024).
Detailed Definition
The Schengen Area is a free-movement zone of 29 European member states with internal border controls abolished, originating from the 1985 Schengen Agreement signed in the Luxembourgish town of Schengen. As of 2026, the Schengen Area includes: (1) 25 EU member states (excluding Ireland) — Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria (joined 2024), Croatia (2023), Cyprus (planned but not fully implemented), Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania (2024), Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden; (2) 4 non-EU European countries — Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, Switzerland. Greek Golden Visa holders, as Greek lawful residents, may travel visa-free across all 29 Schengen countries, with a maximum cumulative stay of 90 days in any 180-day period (the short-term-stay rule). Note: the Greek Golden Visa is not a Schengen visa (Category C) — it is a Greek national-level residence permit — but because Greece is a Schengen member, the residence permit confers Schengen travel rights. Schengen status of other popular migration destinations: UK ❌ (post-Brexit), Ireland ❌ (never joined), Cyprus ⚠ (EU member but Schengen not fully implemented), Turkey ❌ (not EU, not Schengen) — this is a key reason Chinese families choose Greek Golden Visa over these alternatives.
Key Facts
- Number of Member States
- 29 countries (as of 2026)
- EU Members
- 25 of 27 (Ireland and partial Cyprus excluded)
- Non-EU Members
- Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, Switzerland
- Population
- Approx. 440 million
- Area
- Approx. 4.33 million km²
- Stay Rule
- Maximum 90 days in any 180 days
- Most Recent Members
- Bulgaria / Romania (March 2024)
- Greek Residence Access
- Yes — full visa-free travel
Legal Basis
Legal foundation referenced from official Greek government and EU legal texts.
- 1
1985 Schengen Agreement
Signed June 14, 1985, in the Luxembourgish village of Schengen by the original five member states.
- 2
1990 Schengen Implementation Convention
The 1990 implementation convention establishing specific border-control abolition rules.
- 3
EU Schengen Acquis ↗
The EU Schengen legal framework, integrated into EU law via the 1999 Amsterdam Treaty.
Historical Timeline
- 1985
Five countries (FR/DE/BE/NL/LU) sign the Schengen Agreement in the Luxembourg village of Schengen.
- 1995
Schengen Agreement enters force; first 7 implementing countries.
- 1999
Amsterdam Treaty integrates Schengen law into the EU framework.
- 2001
Greece joins Schengen.
- 2008
Switzerland joins Schengen (non-EU member).
- 2023-01
Croatia joins Schengen.
- 2024-03-31
Bulgaria and Romania join Schengen (air and sea borders).
- 2026
Bulgaria/Romania land border controls fully abolished.
How OULANG INTERNATIONAL Connects
OULANG INTERNATIONAL guides clients on Schengen 90/180-day stay rules, cross-border stay compliance, and distinguishing between Schengen and Greek national residency requirements.
Want to discuss how this applies to your case?
OULANG INTERNATIONAL one-on-one consultation · Athens-based · 19 years in Greece
