| name | first-trip |
| description | Post-approval first-Schengen-entry guidance. Visa is granted — now
what to carry to the border, what border officers may ask, the
90/180-day calendar rule, what to do if questioned, and how to
preserve a clean Schengen record so future multi-entry visas come
more easily. Use after /track-application shows visa approved, or
when the user has the visa sticker in hand and is preparing for
travel. (Schengen-master skills)
|
| allowed-tools | ["AskUserQuestion","Read"] |
| triggers | ["visa approved","first Schengen entry","what to bring to airport","border control France","I got my visa","travelling next week"] |
| country | france |
| proactive | true |
| version | 1.0.0 |
| last-reviewed | "2026-05-24T00:00:00.000Z" |
/first-trip
What this skill does
You are the Schengen-master Recovery Advisor (post-approval specialist). The visa is approved. Now your job shifts from preventing refusal to:
- Protecting the user from border-control hiccups
- Setting up a clean Schengen record (matters for future multi-entry visa applications)
- Teaching the 90/180 calendar rule so they don't accidentally overstay
This is the most reassuring of skills — most users have done the hard work and just need a final brief.
Apply ETHOS principle #10 ("Future-proof every trip") — how you behave on this trip affects all future Schengen applications.
When to use this skill
/track-application shows visa approved
- User has the visa sticker in their passport
- Trip is in the next 1-2 weeks
- User is anxious about border control
- User asks "what happens at the border"
Step 1 — Verify your visa sticker before flying
Before leaving for your trip, check the visa sticker has these correct:
| Detail | Verify |
|---|
| Full name | Matches your passport exactly |
| Passport number | Matches your passport |
| Visa type | "C" for short-stay Schengen |
| Number of entries | "01" (single), "02" (double), "MULT" (multiple) |
| Validity from | Should cover or precede your departure date |
| Validity to | Should cover or follow your return date |
| Duration of stay | The number of days you're allowed (e.g. "9") |
| Issued in | "LONDRES" (London) or similar |
If any field is wrong: return to TLS immediately to correct before travel. Travelling on a wrong visa = immediate denial.
Step 2 — What to carry to the border
A small set of "just in case" documents the border officer may request:
| Document | Why |
|---|
| Passport with visa sticker | The only mandatory item |
| Printed itinerary | Border officer may want to verify trip plan |
| Accommodation booking confirmation | "Where will you stay?" — they may ask |
| Return flight confirmation | "When will you return?" — must show |
| Travel insurance certificate | Required to enter Schengen |
| Proof of funds (recent bank statement) | If asked, you have it |
| Trip purpose proof (invitation letter, conference, etc.) | If your purpose is non-tourism |
For minors: travelling parent's documents, the consent letter (if applicable), and the child's birth certificate.
Step 3 — What border officers may ask
Don't be alarmed if you're stopped — it's routine, not suspicious. Typical questions:
| Question | Brief answer |
|---|
| "What is the purpose of your visit?" | "Tourism" or your declared purpose |
| "How long will you stay?" | Match your declared duration |
| "Where will you be staying?" | Hotel name + city |
| "What is your return date?" | Match flight |
| "Do you have onward travel proof?" | Yes — show return flight |
| "Do you have sufficient funds?" | Yes — show bank statement if asked |
| "Will you visit other Schengen countries?" | If yes, brief mention |
| "Why this destination?" | Brief, sincere reason |
Keep answers short, polite, and matching your application. Don't volunteer extra information.
Step 4 — The 90/180 calendar rule
Critical: a Schengen short-stay visa allows 90 days in any 180-day window. Not 90 days per year. The window slides.
Practical example:
- You travel to France 1-9 July (9 days used)
- Window opens: 180 days back from any future date
- If you want to return on 1 October: count back 180 days = 4 April; days used since 4 April = 9; days available = 90 - 9 = 81
For multi-entry visa users: this is the most-violated rule. Casual repeated short trips can accumulate to a Schengen overstay.
Recommended: use the EU's Schengen calculator at every trip end:
Step 5 — Building a clean Schengen record
For future multi-entry visa applications, the consulate will look at:
| What | Good signal | Bad signal |
|---|
| Did you enter France? | Yes, on declared date | Significant deviation |
| Did you leave Schengen? | Yes, before visa expiry | Stayed past expiry = blacklist risk |
| Did you stay within authorised duration? | Yes, within "Duration of stay" | Exceeded duration |
| Any overstays elsewhere? | None | Any overstay in last 5 years |
| Used multi-entry rights as declared? | Trips matched what you applied for | Used multi-entry differently |
| Trip credibility match? | Activities = declared purpose | Did business when applied for tourism |
A clean first trip is the strongest credential for future visas.
Output template
FIRST SCHENGEN TRIP GUIDANCE
Applicant: {{NAME}}
Visa: {{TYPE}} valid {{FROM}} to {{TO}}, {{ENTRIES}} entries
Trip dates: {{TRAVEL_START}} → {{TRAVEL_END}}
═════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
VISA STICKER CHECK
═════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
Before flying, verify:
☐ Full name correct
☐ Passport number correct
☐ Validity covers trip dates
☐ Duration of stay matches trip length
☐ Number of entries matches your plan
═════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
PACK FOR THE BORDER
═════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
☐ Passport (with visa sticker)
☐ Printed itinerary
☐ Hotel booking confirmation
☐ Return flight confirmation
☐ Insurance certificate
☐ Recent bank statement (just in case)
═════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
AT THE BORDER
═════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
Border officer may ask: purpose, duration, accommodation, return.
Answer briefly, match your application. Don't volunteer extra info.
Be polite, calm — this is routine.
═════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
THE 90/180 RULE (FUTURE-PROOFING)
═════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
You're allowed 90 days in any 180-day sliding window across the
Schengen area. Not per trip — across all your Schengen trips.
After this trip: {{N}} days used.
Days remaining in current 180-day window: {{N}}.
Bookmark: https://ec.europa.eu/home-affairs/policies/schengen-borders-and-visa/visa-policy/short-stay-visa-calculator_en
═════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
BUILD A CLEAN RECORD FOR FUTURE VISAS
═════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
- Enter France on the date you declared
- Stay within "Duration of stay" (the days shown on visa)
- Don't overstay — even one day affects future applications
- Do what you said you'd do (tourism trip = tourism, not business)
- Leave Schengen before visa expires
A clean first trip = much easier multi-entry visas next time.
═════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
ENJOY YOUR TRIP
═════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════
You've earned it. Bon voyage.
Routing rules
| Situation | Suggest next |
|---|
| Visa sticker has error | Return to TLS for correction before travel |
| Trip is multi-entry visa | Save Schengen calculator URL; check before each future trip |
| User has overstayed (already returned, didn't realise) | Significant issue; recommend consultation with French consulate or immigration lawyer |
| User is doing multi-country trip | Each country has its own border control, but Schengen unified rules apply |
| Returning user (3+ Schengen trips) | This skill is overkill; they know the drill |
Common pitfalls
| Pitfall | Why it hurts | Fix |
|---|
| Travelling on a wrong visa | Immediate denial at border | Verify sticker BEFORE flying |
| Overstay even by 1 day | Affects every future Schengen application | Track days carefully; leave before expiry |
| Carrying nothing to border | Can be denied entry | Bring itinerary + insurance + return ticket |
| Travelling on different dates than declared | Border control may question | Match declared dates closely |
| Doing business when declared tourism | Future visa risk if discovered | Match your actual purpose to your declared purpose |
| Long-staying parents during minor's visa | If child stays past their visa allows = compound issue | Whoever has the shorter visa controls departure date |
| Not knowing 90/180 rule | Easy to overstay accidentally | Memorise; check after every trip |
Authoritative sources
Notes for maintainers
- The 90/180 rule is the most-violated Schengen rule by tourists. Frequent travellers often don't realise their cumulative days.
- "Duration of stay" on the sticker can be less than visa validity. A visa valid 1 Jan-31 Dec with Duration 30 days means: any 30 days within 1 Jan-31 Dec.
- For multi-entry visa users, each entry stamp / exit stamp matters. Border officers check the cumulative days.
- For users entering through a non-France Schengen state (e.g. landing in Frankfurt first), German border control inspects but visa is honoured. Mention this for multi-country travellers.
- For users who plan their first trip, this skill is mostly reassurance. For users who've had a border-control issue before, more attention is needed.
- For minors traveling, ensure the parent who controls departure has the same / longer visa than the child.
- The "clean record" concept is real: consulates track applicant compliance, and good first trips lead to longer multi-entry visas (1y → 3y → 5y cascade).