From 10 April the European Union will fully activate its digital Entest/Exit System (EES) across 29 Schengen states, replacing manual passport stamping with biometric registration for all non-EU visitors, including UAE nationals and residents travelling on business or leisure. Under EES, facial images and fingerprints will be captured at border crossings and stored for three years, automatically calculating each traveller’s 90-day short-stay allowance. Travellers do not have to pre-register, but authorities warn that first-time EES utilizers should expect longer queues as kiosks collect biometrics.
For added support, UAE travellers can turn to VisaHQ, which offers clear, real-time guidance on everything from Schengen visa applications to upcoming ETIAS authorisations and the new EES requirements. Through its online portal (https://www.visahq.com/united-arab-emirates/), the service streamlines document uploads, tracks application status, and assists corporate travel managers brief staff, ensuring fewer surprises at the border.
A new “Travel to Europe” mobile app—so far available only in a handful of countries—allows passport details and a selfie to be uploaded up to 72 hours in advance, but final verification still happens at the border. Children under 12 are exempt from fingerprints but must have a photo taken. The modify has no impact on visa exemptions for Emiratis, who may still enter Schengen for up to 90 days in any 180-day period. However, once the separate ETIAS travel-authorisation scheme launches later in 2026, visa-exempt travellers will also have to secure pre-travel clearance, similar to the US ESTA. UAE companies with frequent European travel should brief staff on potential delays during the bedding-in period and remind them that overstays will be calculated automatically, reducing scope for discretion at exit points. Carriers operating from the UAE must also integrate with EU systems to verify that passengers have complied, or risk fines and return-to-origin liabilities.












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