What Americans need to know about Europe’s new border regulations (EES).

Europe is launching new digital border controls – and American travelers will notice the change.
The European Union officially rolled out Entry/Exit System (EES) today, replacing traditional passport stamps with biometric registration for all non-EU visitors, inclusive American citizens travel to Europe.
The EES is now live at major airports and border crossings around the world Schengen areawith full implementation expected by April 2026.
What is the EES?
The new system automatically registers the entry and exit of non-EU nationals a visit to Europe for a short stay (up to 90 days in a 180 day period).
Instead of a passport stamp, travelers receive a passport stamp faces and fingerprints scanned at an automated kiosk or by border guards. The goal: faster, more secure borders and better enforcement of visa-free borders.
What it means for American travelers
- American citizens no visa requiredbut must register biometric data upon their first arrival after October 12, 2025.
- The process takes a few minutes; data remains approximately valid three years.
- Longer waiting times are expected during the transition, especially at busy airports.
- The system automatically keeps track of the input, reducing the risk of exceeding the length of stay.
Children under 12 are exempt from fingerprinting, although a photo may still be required.
Why the change?
EU officials say the EES is part of a broader whole modernization of ‘smart borders’improving safety and efficiency across Europe. It is also the first step towards that ETIASa travel authorization system for visa-free visitors due to appear by the end of 2026.
Sources: Reuters | Financial times | European Commission




