I'm reading about it, it's complicate.
As a third-country national he has less otpion than someone with a EU citizenship traveling to another EU country.
ok, so maybe I don't want to travel
I'm reading about it, it's complicate.
As a third-country national he has less otpion than someone with a EU citizenship traveling to another EU country.
I'm reading about it, it's complicate.
As a third-country national he has less otpion than someone with a EU citizenship traveling to another EU country.
Yeah...I don't understand it. I haven't had a chance to chat with him much in the past week or so. I guess if he gets deported, he will be home for the holidays. :-)
I'm sure he will love it, you get VIP treatment too and they drive you straight to the plan.
He could have to pay a fine as well from what I'm reading.And get banned from entering the EU for up to 5 years, if he stays over his 90 days limit.
Well, he would NOT like that. Yikes. I may have to try to catch him online in the morning and see how long before he leaves there.
I read that the fine can be up to several hundreds of dollars for overstaying even for a day.
Also he can't leave the Schengen area and get back it to get another 90 days.
He has only 90 days in a 180 days period, so he would have to stay out of the EU for 3 months before he can come back.
And they might not allow him to get back if they notice he spent over 90 days the first time.
I would suggest he contacts the nearest US embassy ASAP.
He might also be able to apply to a visa to stay more, some countries might require him to leave and come back with a visa though.
He knew about the 90 days on and 90 days off thing so he had plans to be somewhere else but got detained at one of the places he stayed. I was wondering if contacting thee Embassy was something he should be doing. I'll message him. Thanks
I read a bunch of things and couldn't find an easy solution for him, if he really got over the 90 days of if he's close to it.
I'm sure the embassy deal with that all the time.