EuroWire, BRUSSELS: The European Union said its Entry/Exit System will become fully operational on April 10, completing a six-month rollout that began on October 12, 2025 and marking one of the bloc’s biggest changes to external border procedures in years. The system replaces the manual stamping of passports with a digital record of entries, exits and refusals of entry for non-EU nationals traveling for short stays, and stores facial images, fingerprints and travel document data collected at the border.

The Entry/Exit System, known as EES, is being deployed across 29 European countries and is designed for non-EU travelers entering for visits typically capped at 90 days within any 180-day period. EU authorities say the database allows border guards to identify overstays more efficiently and detect document and identity fraud through biometric checks. The system applies to short-stay travelers at the external borders of participating countries, while EU citizens and several exempt categories are outside its scope.
The European Commission said early results from the phased launch showed the scale of the shift before full activation. Since the rollout started, more than 45 million border crossings have been registered through the system. More than 24,000 people were refused entry for reasons including expired or fraudulent documents or inadequate justification for travel, while more than 600 people identified as posing a security risk were denied entry and recorded in the database for future checks.
What changes for travelers
For travelers, the main practical change is that first-time registration will now be digital rather than paper-based. Border authorities record a facial image, fingerprints and passport details, then use that record on future crossings within the system. The EU has said the EES also allows wider use of automated border controls and self-service systems at external borders. From April 10, the bloc says manual passport stamping will no longer serve as the core method for recording short-stay arrivals and departures in the participating countries.
EU officials have presented the project as part of a broader effort to modernize border management while tightening enforcement of existing stay limits. The Commission first proposed the system in 2016, and the legal framework was adopted in 2017, but the launch was delayed several times before lawmakers approved a progressive start that allowed countries to introduce it gradually. That phased approach ended with the April 10 deadline for full operations across the countries using the EES.
Separate timeline for ETIAS
The EU has also sought to separate the EES rollout from the later launch of ETIAS, the bloc’s travel authorization program for visa-exempt visitors. ETIAS is not starting on April 10. EU travel guidance says that program is due to begin in the last quarter of 2026, meaning travelers should not confuse the new border registration system now taking full effect with the separate pre-travel authorization requirement that will follow later.
With the EES moving to full operations, the EU’s external border regime for short-stay non-EU travelers shifts to a system centered on biometric verification and digital movement records rather than passport stamps. Officials say the platform is intended to register entries, exits and refusals of entry in real time across participating countries, giving border authorities a common tool to verify identities and apply stay rules at the frontier.
