Did Finland's border authorities make a mistake?

1/15/2020 11:18:29 PM

It sees to me that the first 180 day period was from July 1st to December 31st, and the next 180 day period was from Januar 1st to June 30th.

She just stayed below the 90 days in the first period (July 1st to September 15th = 77 days, plus Dec. 21st to Dec 31st = 11 days, total 88 days), and in the second period she stays 21 days from Jan 1st to Jan 21st, and is allowed 69 more days. So entering Dec. 18th would have been a problem (except my calculation can be off a few days), but what she did is absolutely fine.

1/12/2015 2:10:15 PM

The Danish police and the Schengen calculator are right, and the Finnish border guard must be severely confused about the rules he’s supposed to administer. (It sounds to me as if he thought a 6-month period started when she entered on July 1, and that she would need to be present at the border for some formalities when the next 6-month period starts. That doesn’t make much sense, even under the old rules from before 90/180, but it’s what sounds least crazy to me, particularly the instruction to be back in Finland (he may have said “back here”?) rather than leave Schengen by Jan 1. In any case, which particular misunderstanding the border guard had is not practically important now).

Will she have problems going back? In the absence of further evidence, I think it is much more likely that there’s a single confused border guard in Helsinki than that the Finnish border authorities have an actual policy of not following the Schengen rules. It is not particularly likely that she will meet the same confused guard going back. And even if she does, he won’t be able to actually do anything to her without involving a superior, and the superior would be able to set things straight then.

Of course it wouldn’t hurt to make sure she has enough transit time in Helsinki for an hour or so of delay at exit immigration while things are sorted out, without missing her onwards flight. But most probably it won’t be necessary.

In short, I wouldn’t worry. But it’s really of limited help to you to know how risk-adverse or not I or someone else who answers is. So you have to decide for yourselves whether to do something more rash to avoid the risk.

If you do want to do something, instead of booking an entire new return trip through Dubai, you might see if you can get Finnair to change her return trip to be from London instead of Copenhagen, and then buy a cheap single Copenhagen-London to connect. That way she would go through the Schengen exit checks in Copenhagen and only make an airside transit in Helsinki later, without coming into contact with Finnish immigration at all.

Credit:stackoverflow.com

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Hello,My name is Aparna Patel,I’m a Travel Blogger and Photographer who travel the world full-time with my hubby.I like to share my travel experience.

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