Graham376
Well-known member
I sent an enquiry to the UK embassy in Lisbon about conflicting information. First is my enquiry, after that is the embassy reply just received. Make your own minds up about what it will/will not allow us to do.
I am receiving conflicting information regarding free travel within Schengen for those of us with residence in an EU State.
This excerpt from a January 2019 editorial has just been published on a sailing forum-
The British Ambassador to Portugal has been attending a series of 'surgeries' around the country talking to British overseas residents about the possible outcomes of the UK leaving the EU. She stressed that all British citizens should make sure that their authorizations for residency, passports and other documentation is up to date and in order. Residents will retain their current EU rights in their host country, but under the latest 'Withdrawal Agreement', they will lose the right of free movement, including travel within the Schengen area for longer than 90 days in every 180.
Earlier this year, I contacted Europe Direct and received the following reply in March-
Thank you for contacting the Europe Direct Contact Centre and apologies for the late reply.We have consulted the Directorate-General for Justice and Consumers (DG JUST). They can inform you that when transiting via another country than the Member State of residence, passports should not be stamped on entry/exit. Residence permit holders are not limited to the maximum period of stay of 90/180 days within the Schengen area as they have a right of residence going beyond these days in the Member State which issued the residence permit.
Which statement is correct? Obviously, they can't both be.
Regards,
Thank you for your enquiry.
Free movement within Schengen is not part of the Withdrawal Agreement. However, the UK and the European Union agreed that UK nationals will be exempt from visa requirements for short visits in the Schengen area. This means that, after the end of the transition period (from 1 January 2021 onwards), UK nationals will have a limitation of the days they can spend visa-free in the Schengen area (a maximum of 90 days in every 180 days).
If you are resident in a Schengen member state, such as Portugal, you have no limitation of time you can spend in your country of residence, and the time spent in that country does not count for the 90 days.
Another exception is transiting – crossing without staying – via a Schengen country to enter the country of residence. Since this is not consider a stay, the days you spend crossing should not count for the 90 days.
I hope this clears up any confusion in this matter.
Kind regards
I am receiving conflicting information regarding free travel within Schengen for those of us with residence in an EU State.
This excerpt from a January 2019 editorial has just been published on a sailing forum-
The British Ambassador to Portugal has been attending a series of 'surgeries' around the country talking to British overseas residents about the possible outcomes of the UK leaving the EU. She stressed that all British citizens should make sure that their authorizations for residency, passports and other documentation is up to date and in order. Residents will retain their current EU rights in their host country, but under the latest 'Withdrawal Agreement', they will lose the right of free movement, including travel within the Schengen area for longer than 90 days in every 180.
Earlier this year, I contacted Europe Direct and received the following reply in March-
Thank you for contacting the Europe Direct Contact Centre and apologies for the late reply.We have consulted the Directorate-General for Justice and Consumers (DG JUST). They can inform you that when transiting via another country than the Member State of residence, passports should not be stamped on entry/exit. Residence permit holders are not limited to the maximum period of stay of 90/180 days within the Schengen area as they have a right of residence going beyond these days in the Member State which issued the residence permit.
Which statement is correct? Obviously, they can't both be.
Regards,
Thank you for your enquiry.
Free movement within Schengen is not part of the Withdrawal Agreement. However, the UK and the European Union agreed that UK nationals will be exempt from visa requirements for short visits in the Schengen area. This means that, after the end of the transition period (from 1 January 2021 onwards), UK nationals will have a limitation of the days they can spend visa-free in the Schengen area (a maximum of 90 days in every 180 days).
If you are resident in a Schengen member state, such as Portugal, you have no limitation of time you can spend in your country of residence, and the time spent in that country does not count for the 90 days.
Another exception is transiting – crossing without staying – via a Schengen country to enter the country of residence. Since this is not consider a stay, the days you spend crossing should not count for the 90 days.
I hope this clears up any confusion in this matter.
Kind regards