
Netherlands Visa and Entry Requirements (2026)
There's no single answer — it depends on your passport. The Netherlands is a full Schengen Area member: most Western nationalities (US, UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand) get visa-free entry for up to 90 days within any rolling 180-day period, shared across all 29 Schengen countries combined, not 90 days per country. Starting in Q4 2026, visa-exempt travelers will also need an ETIAS pre-travel authorization (a quick online form, about $22/€20, valid 3 years) — check the current status before you book, since the launch date has shifted before.
Visa questions are the one place a generic travel-blog answer can actually cost you a flight or a border denial. Here's the real breakdown by passport, plus the one 2026 change worth watching closely — a new pre-travel authorization that's been delayed more than once already.
Visa-free stay by passport (as of mid-2026)
| Passport | Current visa-free stay | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| United States, Canada | Up to 90 days per 180-day period | No advance visa needed for short tourist stays. ETIAS required from Q4 2026 (see below). |
| United Kingdom | Up to 90 days per 180-day period | The UK is not in Schengen post-Brexit — this is the visa-free tourist allowance the Netherlands (and the rest of Schengen) grants UK passport holders. |
| Australia, New Zealand | Up to 90 days per 180-day period | Same terms as US/Canada; ETIAS required from Q4 2026. |
| EU / EEA / Swiss citizens | No limit | Free movement rights — no visa, no day limit, no ETIAS. |
| India | No — a Schengen visa is required in advance | Apply through a Dutch consulate or visa center (VFS Global) before your trip — budget several weeks for processing and a €90 fee. This is a full visa, not the ETIAS online form. |
| China | No — a Schengen visa is required in advance | Same process as India — apply well ahead of travel; a clean prior Schengen travel record can help with getting a multi-entry visa. |
| Gulf states (UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Oman) | Up to 90 days per 180-day period | All currently visa-exempt for short stays, same as US/UK/Australia — and all will need ETIAS once it's mandatory too. |
| South Africa | No — a Schengen visa is required in advance | South African passport holders need a Schengen visa; apply at a Dutch consulate or visa center well before your trip. |
| Brazil, most of Latin America | Up to 90 days per 180-day period | Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Mexico, and most of South and Central America are visa-exempt for tourism — ETIAS applies to these nationalities once it launches. Check your specific country, since a few exceptions exist. |
| Southeast Asia (Malaysia visa-free; Philippines, Indonesia, Vietnam need a visa) | Mixed | Malaysia is visa-exempt (90/180 rule, ETIAS later). Philippines, Indonesia, and Vietnam passport holders need a Schengen visa arranged in advance — there's no single answer for the region. |
| Other nationalities | Varies — many at 90 days, some requiring a Schengen visa in advance | Check the Netherlands' current visa-exemption list for your specific passport before booking. |
The 90-day allowance is shared across the entire Schengen Area, not per country — 30 days in France plus 30 in Germany plus 30 in the Netherlands uses up your full 90, it doesn't reset at each border. The Entry/Exit System (EES) now logs every entry and exit digitally, so overstaying is tracked automatically, not just checked on your way out.
ETIAS: the new rule to watch for 2026
ETIAS (European Travel Information and Authorisation System) is a pre-travel screening form, similar in spirit to the US ESTA or Canada's eTA — not a visa, just an online authorization you get before you fly. It's officially expected to launch in Q4 2026 (most likely October or November), with a roughly six-month transitional grace period after that before it's strictly enforced everywhere, pushing full mandatory enforcement into around April 2027. As of mid-2026 it is not yet live — if a website is charging you to 'apply' for ETIAS right now, it's not legitimate; the only real portal will be the official EU one, once launched.
Once live, ETIAS will cost about $22 (€20), is valid for 3 years or until your passport expires (whichever comes first), and covers unlimited entries into the Schengen Area during that time. Applicants under 18 or over 70 are exempt from the fee. Because the launch date has already shifted more than once, check the current status close to your actual travel dates rather than trusting an old article — including this one.
Other entry basics
- Your passport should be valid for at least 3 months beyond your planned departure date from the Schengen Area, and issued within the last 10 years.
- Border officers can ask for proof of onward travel, accommodation, or sufficient funds for your stay — keep a digital or printed copy of your return ticket and hotel bookings handy.
- Overstaying the 90-day limit can result in fines, entry bans on future Schengen travel, or both — it's tracked automatically via the EES, so it's not worth risking.
The Entry/Exit System (EES) — what actually happens at the border
The EU's Entry/Exit System replaces manual passport stamping for non-EU visitors with a digital record: a first-time entry at any Schengen border now involves a quick biometric check (fingerprints and a facial photo) alongside the usual passport scan, logged automatically against your 90-day allowance. It sounds bureaucratic, but in practice it adds only a couple of minutes at the border on your first crossing — after that, subsequent entries are faster since your biometrics are already on file.
If you're combining the Netherlands with a non-Schengen country
Remember that time spent in the UK, Ireland, or any non-Schengen country doesn't count against your 90-day Schengen allowance, but time in Schengen members like Germany, France, Belgium, or Italy does. A common itinerary mistake is planning a Netherlands-plus-UK trip and assuming both count the same way — they don't, which is actually good news if your UK leg is long, since it doesn't eat into your Schengen clock at all.
A free, unofficial Schengen calculator (search 'Schengen 90/180 calculator') is worth bookmarking if your Europe trip spans multiple visits across the year — it's easy to lose track of exactly how many days you've used, especially if you're a frequent visitor rather than a once-a-year tourist.












































