Upvote:1
As a holder of a Type-D visa from a Schengen member state you do not need a visa to enter and stay in Romania for 90 days out of a 180 day period:
Holders of Schengen visas with two or multiple entries, national visas or residence permits issued by Schengen Member States. Starting July 11, 2014, in keeping with the provisions of Decision No 565/2014/EU, Romania acknowledges as being equivalent to its own national visas, for transit and for stays up to 90 days per period of 180 days the following:
- The two or multiple entry short-stay visa issued by a Schengen member state;
- The limited territorial validity visa issued by a Schengen member state;
- The short-stay visa issued by Bulgaria, Cyprus or Croatia;
- The long-stay visa issued by a Schengen member state;
- The long-stay visa issued by Bulgaria, Cyprus or Croatia;
- The residence permit issued by a Schengen member state;
- The residence permit issued by Bulgaria, Cyprus or Croatia
- The long-term resident's EC residence permit (the validity of which is of 5 years or more) issued by a member state of the European Union.
Since the process by which Romania will join the Schengen Area is currently being delayed, you will encounter a border with passport control upon landing in Romania. You will have to show the immigration officer all the documentation supporting your case. This includes:
Do not stress, be truthful, and you will be fine.
Upvote:1
Is this an issue that I am leaving from Spain and my passport was not stamped on entry in Spain?
No. Schengen stamps record entry and exit from the Schengen area. The fact that your entry into the Schengen area was through a different country is of no consequence. You could have a stamp from Germany and that would be fine (if you had flown in on a German airline, for example) or Poland (if you had entered by land).
Will I be asked about this?
Probably not, because the country of entry is of no consequence. It is more likely (although the probability is still low) that a border officer would ask why your entry stamp shows a date before the beginning of your visa's period of validity.
And in case I was asked, should I explain that I had a valid Italian permit of stay and that I entered Spain through Italy and that is why it was never stamped?
Yes. The fact that your stamp was from any particular country is of no consequence, but as noted above the timing of the stamp may raise suspicion. If it does, you should say what you have told us about the permesso di soggiorno.