Passport rule
Passport should expire at least 3 months after departure from the Schengen area. Destination-specific consulates may add format/page rules.
European Commission Schengen visa guidanceVisa requirement workflow
Prepare Schengen family or private visit documents with invitation, relationship proof, accommodation, insurance, funds, passport, form, and appointment.
Passport should expire at least 3 months after departure from the Schengen area. Destination-specific consulates may add format/page rules.
European Commission Schengen visa guidance2026-04-29. Rules can change, so always check the official source before final submission.
Private or family visits usually need invitation or host documentation based on the destination country.
Travel medical insurance, passport validity, itinerary, funds, and appointment documents remain central.
VisaFlow AI tracks destination-specific official source links where available.
Confirm the main Schengen destination and 90/180-day short-stay limit.
Check the embassy/consulate or visa centre for the main destination country.
Prepare application form, passport, photo, insurance, itinerary, accommodation, funds, and purpose documents.
Book appointment, submit biometrics/documents, and pay the visa fee.
Carry original/supporting documents if requested by the destination authority.
A short-stay Schengen application requires a completed visa application form for the relevant destination authority.
Schengen short-stay applications require a valid travel document that can receive the visa sticker.
Schengen applications require recent identity photos according to the destination authority's standard.
Schengen short-stay applications generally require medical travel insurance for the Schengen stay.
Most applicants submit biometrics and documents through an embassy, consulate, or visa application centre appointment.
Tourism/private visit applicants usually need to show the planned route, dates, and return/onward arrangements.
Applies when: Applicant is travelling for tourism, family/private visit, medical care, or transit.
Applicants usually need to show where they will stay, such as hotel bookings or host accommodation evidence.
Applies when: Applicant will stay in hotel, rental, with family, friends, or another host.
For private/family visits, destination countries often ask for invitation or host documentation to show the purpose and accommodation.
Applies when: Purpose of visit is family visit, private visit, or applicant will stay with a host.
For family/private visits, relationship evidence can support the visit purpose and host connection.
Applies when: Purpose of visit is family visit or visiting a relative.
Schengen applications commonly require proof that the applicant can cover stay and return/onward travel costs.
Applies when: Applicant pays personally or partly pays for the trip.
If another person pays or hosts, their support, identity, and residence/status evidence may be requested by the destination authority.
Applies when: Another person will cover some or all trip costs.
These documents help show socio-economic situation and intention to return after the visit.
Applies when: Applicant wants to show ties to home or residence country.
Medical short-stay cases generally need care provider, diagnosis/treatment plan, and payment coverage evidence.
Applies when: Purpose of visit is medical treatment.
Transit cases need evidence of onward journey and ability to enter the next destination.
Applies when: Purpose of visit is transit.