Van Life in Europe from the UK: A 2026 Starter Guide

Van life in Europe in 2026 means navigating three things that didn’t exist when most of the advice online was written: biometric border checks (EES, live since 10 April 2026), updated pet travel rules (changed on 22 April 2026), and the Schengen 90/180-day rule that shapes everything from route planning to how long you can stay somewhere you love.

One thing worth saying upfront: a lot of the van life content about “doing Europe” is written from a UK or US perspective, and the rules genuinely differ depending on your passport. I’m Lithuanian, which means I hold an EU passport. The 90/180-day rule, EES, and ETIAS simply do not apply to me. I can move freely across the Schengen Area indefinitely. If you’re from another EU country, the same is true for you.

This guide is primarily written for UK passport holders, because that’s where the complexity sits in 2026. But I’ve flagged the EU citizen differences throughout, because half the van life community I know is European, and the guides rarely acknowledge this.

TL;DR

  • The Entry/Exit System (EES) went fully live across the Schengen Area on 10 April 2026. UK travellers are biometrically registered at the border instead of getting a passport stamp. EU citizens: this does not apply to you.
  • ETIAS is not in force yet. Expected Q4 2026. Do not pay anyone claiming to sell one now; they are scams.
  • UK pets need an Animal Health Certificate (AHC) for each new trip from GB, valid for up to six months once issued. EU-issued pet passports (obtained in an EU country) are still valid for travel within the EU.
  • The Schengen 90/180 rule is the single thing UK van lifers most often get wrong. You get 90 days in any rolling 180-day window across the whole Schengen Area, not per country. EU citizens have no such limit.
  • Realistic 2026 ferry costs for a van: roughly £150 to £350 each way to France, £400 to £900 each way to Spain.

The Schengen 90/180 rule – and who it applies to

Before getting into the mechanics, the Schengen Area is not the same as the EU. It’s a group of 29 European countries that have abolished passport controls at their shared borders. Most EU countries are in Schengen, but not all. And several non-EU countries are in Schengen too.

Schengen countries (29): Austria, Belgium, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland.

EU members not in Schengen: Bulgaria, Cyprus, Ireland, Romania.

Notable non-EU, non-Schengen countries popular with van lifers: Albania, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, Morocco, Türkiye.

If you hold a UK passport, you get 90 days in any rolling 180-day period across the entire Schengen Area. The clock is shared across all 29 countries, not reset when you cross from France into Spain. If you hold an EU passport, this rule does not apply. You have freedom of movement.

The official EU calculator at the Schengen short-stay calculator is the only counting method I’d trust. Ferry receipts and Park4Night check-ins are not proof.

What a full year of van life looks like under the 90/180 rule

Here’s a realistic example of how a UK van lifer might structure twelve months.

Months Where Schengen? Days used Running total
January – March Spain, Portugal Schengen 90 90 / 90 used
April – May Morocco, Albania, or back to UK Non-Schengen 0 Clock resets
June – August Italy, Dolomites, France Schengen 90 90 / 90 used
September – October Western Balkans, Montenegro, or UK Non-Schengen 0 Clock resets
November – December Spain or southern France Schengen 60 60 / 90 used

UK passport holders only. EU citizens have no day limit in Schengen.

The key insight is that the 180-day window rolls continuously. You’re not looking at a calendar year, you’re looking backwards from today 180 days, and counting how many of those days were spent in Schengen. The EU calculator does this for you. Use it.

If you’re EU-based, you can ignore all of this. I plan our year around weather and climbing conditions, not passport rules.

What EES means at the border now

The Entry/Exit System (EES) became fully operational across the Schengen Area on 10 April 2026. It replaces passport stamping for non-EU travellers with a digital record of every entry and exit, plus a facial scan and fingerprints on your first crossing.

There’s nothing to apply for. Registration happens at the border the first time you cross. You don’t need to do anything in advance.

The first crossing of any 3-year period is slow; plan for an extra 30 to 60 minutes at peak times, especially Dover, Folkestone, and Portsmouth. After that, subsequent crossings are quick. Your 90/180 days are now counted automatically, which removes the old “they forgot to stamp me out” loophole.

For EU passport holders: EES applies to non-EU nationals. You pass through as normal.

Source: European Commission, EES is fully operational.

ETIAS: not yet, do not pay anyone who says otherwise

ETIAS, the European travel authorisation, is not yet required as of May 2026. It’s expected to launch in Q4 2026 with a transitional period of around six months, so the earliest you’d realistically need one is mid-2027.

You cannot apply for ETIAS yet. Any website charging you for one now is a scam. When it does launch, it will cost €20, last three years, and be free for under-18s and over-70s. It does not change the 90/180 rule. Keep an eye on the official ETIAS site so you know when the applications open.

EU citizens don’t need ETIAS.

Travelling with dogs after the 22 April 2026 rule change

This section covers both the official rules and what we’ve worked out in practice after four years with two dogs.

The official position for UK pets

The rules for taking UK pets to the EU changed on 22 April 2026. UK-issued EU pet passports are no longer accepted. Animal Health Certificates (AHCs) are required instead.

  • Each new trip from GB to the EU needs a fresh AHC, issued within 10 days of departure.
  • Once issued, the AHC is valid for up to six months for onward travel within the EU and for re-entering GB, as long as the rabies vaccination stays current.
  • A pet needs a microchip and a rabies vaccine given at least 21 days before travel.
  • Non-commercial travel is capped at five pets per private vehicle.
  • Tapeworm treatment is still required for dogs entering Ireland, Northern Ireland, Finland, Norway, and Malta.

What we do with Summer and Shadow

Adventure Dogs in the Italian Alps

We got EU pet passports for both dogs after we crossed into France in the early days of our van life. EU-issued pet passports are still valid for travel within the EU, so none of the AHC paperwork applies to us.

When Tomas needs to drive back to the UK for the van’s MOT, I stay in Europe with the dogs. It avoids the logistical headache of bringing two large dogs across the border and back, and honestly, it’s just easier for everyone.

If you’re an EU citizen travelling with pets that have EU pet passports, you’re in the same position as us. The AHC requirement is specifically for pets travelling from Great Britain.

Three things I’d tell anyone new to ferrying with dogs

We’ve done a lot of ferries with Summer and Shadow, including an overnight crossing from Genova to Sicily that was 22 hours long. That one I filmed because I was nervous about it, and figured if everything went smoothly, I could take the stress out of it for someone else. And it did go smoothly.

Book a pet-friendly cabin. It costs more, and it’s worth it completely. The dogs stay with us, they settle quickly once they’ve sniffed the space, and the alternative – dogs in kennels below deck for 22 hours – isn’t something I’d consider. Check the ferry company’s pet policy before you book because not all of them allow dogs in cabins or on board at all. Your booking confirmation will say boarding starts two hours before departure, but arriving earlier than that is fine and gives you time to find your spot in the vehicle queue without rushing.

On shorter Channel crossings with LeShuttle, the dogs stay in the van for the 35-minute tunnel. It’s the easiest possible crossing with dogs and my go-to when we’re in a hurry.

Source: GOV.UK, new EU rules for pet travel.

Documents you need

  • A UK passport with at least 6 months’ validity from your date of entry. Issued less than 10 years before your travel date. The 10-year rule catches a lot of people whose passports were renewed early.
  • A full UK driving licence. No International Driving Permit needed for any EU country if you have the standard UK photocard.
  • The original V5C log book for the van. Not a photocopy.
  • Vehicle insurance with explicit cover for European driving for the duration of your trip. Most UK policies give 30 to 90 days as standard. Anything longer means a specialist insurer.
  • European breakdown cover. The basic AA add-on is not enough for long-term touring.
  • A UK identifier sticker on the back of the van, or a UK identifier on the number plate. This replaced the old GB sticker in September 2021.

I keep all of this in a single zipped wallet in the glovebox. Border checks are smoother when you do not have to look for everything.

What you legally need to carry, by country

Every country has slightly different mandatory equipment. Here is the 2026 version for the countries that most UK van lifers drive through.

Country Warning triangle Hi-vis vest Headlamp converters Spare bulbs Other notable
France Yes YesAccessible from inside Yes Recommended Crit’Air sticker for many cities
Spain YesOne (UK plates) Yes Yes Recommended V16 flashing light required for Spanish-plated vehicles only
Portugal Yes Yes Yes Recommended Electronic-only tolls on some roads – get a Via Verde transponder at the border
Germany Yes Yes Yes Yes Umweltplakette sticker for low-emission zones
Italy Yes Yes Yes Recommended ZTL zones in city centres – do not enter without a permit
Netherlands Recommended Recommended Yes Recommended Milieuzone stickers in Amsterdam, Rotterdam, Utrecht
Switzerland Yes Recommended Yes Recommended Vignette (~CHF 40) required for motorways – annual, no shorter option
Austria Yes Yes Yes Yes Vignette required for motorways, plus separate Brenner Pass toll
Slovenia Yes Yes Yes Recommended E-vignette (~€15/week), registered to your number plate – no sticker
Croatia Yes Yes Yes Recommended Traditional barrier tolls on A1 coast road – cash or card at the booth
Romania Yes Yes Yes Recommended Roviniete vignette (~€10–14/week) – buy online before you cross the border
✓ Yes — legally required ◎ Recommended – not mandatory but worth carrying

A breathalyser is no longer legally required in France; the rule was dropped in 2020. People still sell “Europe driving kits” that include one. You do not need it.

Source: Compulsory equipment when driving in Europe, startrescue.co.uk.

Ferries vs Eurotunnel: what I would book

Approximate 2026 prices for a van around 6m long, one-way, off-peak. Peak summer can be double these numbers, especially in Spain.

Route Operator Crossing time Approx van price
To France
Folkestone → Calais LeShuttle 35 min £130 – £230
Dover → Calais / Dunkirk DFDS, P&O 90 min £100 – £200
Newhaven → Dieppe DFDS 4 hrs £100 – £170
Portsmouth → Caen / Cherbourg Brittany Ferries 6 – 9 hrs £150 – £350
Plymouth → Roscoff Brittany Ferries 8 – 11 hrs £170 – £400
To Spain
Portsmouth → Bilbao Brittany Ferries 24 – 32 hrs £450 – £900
Portsmouth → Santander Brittany Ferries 24 – 32 hrs £450 – £900
To Italy / Sicily (from France)
Genova → Palermo Grimaldi Lines ~22 hrs varies – book early
Toulon → Porto Torres (Sardinia) Grimaldi / Corsica Ferries ~12 hrs varies – book early

Peak summer prices can be double these figures, especially on the Spain routes. A cabin is mandatory on overnight crossings of 8+ hours – factor this into your budget. If you’re travelling with dogs, check the operator’s pet policy before booking: not all companies allow dogs in cabins or on board at all.

What I’d book in each scenario:

  • Short trips: LeShuttle from Folkestone. The dogs stay in the van the whole time. Forty minutes and you’re in France.
  • First-time crossing with a nervous dog: A daytime DFDS Newhaven to Dieppe. Quieter port, more relaxed boarding, and you can often sit in the van during the crossing.
  • Heading to Spain, Portugal, or further south: Brittany Ferries Portsmouth to Bilbao or Santander. It’s expensive, and the cabin is mandatory, but two days of driving through France with two dogs and a van isn’t actually cheap either once you add fuel and tolls.
  • Heading to Sicily or Italy from France: Grimaldi Lines from Genova or Toulon are worth looking at for longer hauls south. The 22-hour overnight crossing to Palermo or Civitavecchia means you wake up somewhere completely different, which is one of the better feelings van life has to offer.

Tolls, low-emission zones, and the small admin

Tolls are one of those things people wildly underestimate before their first European trip. The assumption tends to be that only motorways in France or Spain cost money, and everything else is free. In reality, you’ll encounter toll roads in almost every country you drive through, and the systems vary enough that what works in one country will fail you entirely in the next. Here’s a country-by-country breakdown of what to expect.

France

Traditional barrier tolls on motorways, paid by cash, card, or a Liber-t transponder tag (like Emovis). A Calais to the Spanish border run adds roughly €50 to €120, depending on your route. The tag pays for itself quickly if you do this crossing more than once, and it means you skip the cash queues entirely.

Spain

Most of the AP-7 along the Mediterranean coast was de-tolled a few years ago, which is a meaningful saving in the long run. Catalonia’s C-roads are still tolled. The Basque Country has its own toll system. Budget for some costs and check the route in advance.

Portugal

Portugal has electronic-only tolls on several roads, including parts of the A22 Algarve motorway and roads around Lisbon. If you don’t have a transponder, you’re supposed to pay at CTT post offices or designated payment points within a few days. Many people don’t know this, there are sometimes no toll booths, and the signage is not always obvious. Miss the payment window, and the fine arrives at the address registered to your vehicle, weeks later. We have had this happen. Get a Via Verde transponder at the border before you join the motorway.

Italy

Traditional barrier tolls on most motorways. Pay by card, cash, or Telepass. Straightforward enough, but the costs add up fast on a long Italian run. A drive from the French border down to Sicily via the mainland easily reaches €80 to €120 in tolls.

Romania

This one surprised us! Romania uses a vignette system called Roviniete for national roads, not just motorways. You must buy it before or at the moment you enter the road network, not at a barrier. It’s purchased online at roviniete.ro or at petrol stations and border shops. Prices vary by vehicle category and duration: a week for a standard van is roughly €10 to €14. If you drive without one, you can be fined on the spot, and the inspectors do check.

Slovenia

Vignette system, purchased online or at the border. E-vignette, so no sticker, it’s registered to your number plate. A week costs around €15 for vehicles under 3.5 tonnes. Non-payment is detectable via roadside cameras.

Austria

Vignette required for motorways, around €10 for 10 days. The Brenner Pass motorway into Italy has its own separate toll on top of the vignette. Both apply.

Switzerland

An annual vignette costs around CHF 40 (roughly £35). There’s no shorter duration option, so even if you’re only passing through for two days, you buy the annual one. Available at the border and online. Swiss motorway cameras read plates, and the fines for non-payment are not small.

Croatia

Traditional barrier tolls on major routes, including the A1 down the coast. Pay by card or cash at the barrier. Not electronic-only, so there’s no paperwork trap, but budget for the costs if you’re doing the full Dalmatian coast run. My sister drove from Lithuania to Croatia last year and paid tolls pretty much the whole way down through Slovenia and into Croatia; it adds up over a long journey.

Germany and the Netherlands

No vignette, no motorway tolls for private vehicles. The costs here are in low-emission zones rather than road charges.


The post-in-the-post problem

The pattern that catches people most often, especially on routes through Portugal, Romania, and Slovenia, is electronic toll or vignette systems that don’t have barriers. There’s no moment where you’re forced to stop and pay. You just drive through, and if you haven’t purchased beforehand, you may not even realise you’ve used a tolled road. The fine then arrives at the registered address for the vehicle, sometimes weeks later, sometimes months later.

For UK-registered vans, the fine tends to arrive via a debt collection or foreign enforcement agency, often with an administration surcharge on top of the original penalty. For EU-registered vans, the enforcement is typically more direct because number plate lookup across EU member states is easier.

So before you enter a new country, spend five minutes checking whether it has a vignette system and buy it online before you cross the border. For Portugal specifically, get a transponder at the border. These are small things that cost very little to sort in advance and a lot more to ignore.


Low-emission zones

Separate from tolls, but worth grouping here because the enforcement mechanism is the same: cameras, plate recognition, fine in the post.

France requires a Crit’Air sticker for driving in many city centres and during pollution peaks. Order from the official government site only; third-party sellers charge several times the price for the same sticker. Most modern vans qualify for Crit’Air 1 or 2, which covers the majority of restricted zones.

Germany requires the Umweltplakette environmental sticker for low-emission zones in cities including Berlin, Munich, Hamburg, and Frankfurt. Order from the official German site or buy at a German garage or TÜV centre.

Italy is expanding its ZTL (Zona a Traffico Limitato) zones in 2026. These are restricted traffic areas in historic city centres, enforced entirely by cameras. Entering without a permit is a fine, and there’s no way to pay on the spot because you won’t know you’ve been caught until the letter arrives. Check before you drive into any Italian city centre. If you’re parked outside and want to visit on foot, that’s the better plan anyway.

Apps and tools I still use after 4 years

  • Park4Night for free and paid overnight spots. Read recent reviews, not the headline rating.
  • Google Maps offline downloads for the country I am in, plus the next one. Mobile data still drops in the Pyrenees, the Alps, and most of rural Portugal.
  • Google Translate with offline languages downloaded for every country we will be in. Camera mode for menus and supermarket labels.

Did this help? Come tell me on Instagram 😊

FAQ

Does the 90-day limit reset when I cross into a different Schengen country?

No, and this is the single most common misconception. The 90 days apply across all 29 Schengen countries combined, not per country. Driving from France into Spain doesn’t give you a fresh allowance.

Can I “reset” my 90 days by leaving Schengen and re-entering?

Not immediately. The 180-day window is rolling, not a fixed calendar period. Used days age out gradually as time passes. The only accurate way to track this is the official EU short-stay calculator.

Does EES make overstaying harder to get away with?

Yes. Before EES, some people relied on the inconsistent passport stamping. That’s gone now. Every entry and exit is recorded digitally, and your day count is tracked automatically.

Does the 90/180 rule apply to EU citizens doing van life in Europe?

No. EU passport holders have freedom of movement across the Schengen Area with no day limit. This is one of the biggest differences between UK-based and EU-based van lifers that most guides don’t acknowledge.

What happens if I accidentally overstay my 90 days?

You can be fined at the border, refused re-entry for a period, or, in serious cases, banned from the Schengen Area for up to five years. EES now makes this trackable in real time, so “I didn’t realise” is no longer a viable position.

Do I need to do anything before my first crossing under EES?

Nothing. Registration happens at the border on your first crossing. No pre-registration, no app, no form. Just arrive with extra time, especially at Dover, Folkestone, and Portsmouth.

How much longer will border crossings take because of EES?

The first crossing is the slow one. Budget an extra 30 to 60 minutes at busy ferry ports. After that, your biometrics are on file, and subsequent crossings are faster. Some travellers are reporting 4 to 6 hour waits at the very busiest crossings during the initial rollout period, so early morning departures make sense right now.

Is ETIAS the same as EES? Do I need both?

They’re different things. EES is the biometric border system already in place. ETIAS is a pre-travel authorisation, similar to the US ESTA, which isn’t required yet and isn’t expected to be mandatory until at least mid-2027. You cannot apply for ETIAS yet, and any site charging you for one is a scam.

Do EES and ETIAS apply to EU citizens?

No. Both apply to non-EU nationals entering the Schengen Area on short stays. EU passport holders pass through as usual.

Can I still use an EU pet passport obtained from a vet in France or Spain?

This depends on where you are resident, and it’s genuinely complicated. From 22 April 2026, EU pet passports are only valid if your main home is in the EU. If you live in the UK and obtained an EU passport while visiting Europe, it is no longer accepted under the new rules. If your main residence is in the EU (for example, you live full-time in a van and are based in an EU country), the situation is less clear and worth checking with the vet who issued the passport. We got our dogs’ EU passports when we were living on the road in France, and as EU citizens with no fixed GB address, our passports remain valid.

What does the AHC rule mean in practice for UK-based van lifers with dogs?

Every new trip from Great Britain into the EU requires a fresh Animal Health Certificate, issued by an official vet within 10 days of departure. Once you have it and you’ve crossed into the EU, it’s valid for six months for travel within Europe and for re-entering GB. The certificate isn’t the hard part – finding a vet with availability in that 10-day window before sailing is.

Are EU pet passports coming back for UK owners?

The UK government announced in May 2025 that they intend to reintroduce UK pet passports as part of trade discussions with the EU, but no timeline has been confirmed. Most informed sources expect this to happen in 2027 at the earliest. For now, AHCs are still required for every trip from GB.

Can dogs stay with me in a ferry cabin overnight?

On most Channel crossings, dogs stay in your vehicle. On longer overnight routes (Brittany Ferries to Spain, Grimaldi Lines to Sicily and Sardinia), pet-friendly cabins are available but limited – book early and check the specific operator’s policy before booking, as not all companies allow dogs in cabins or on board at all.

Do I need tapeworm treatment every time I travel with my dog?

Only for travel to Ireland, Northern Ireland, Finland, Norway, and Malta. For the rest of Europe, no tapeworm treatment is required.

Which European countries use electronic tolls with no barriers?

Portugal and Romania are the main ones that catch people out. In Portugal, several roads use electronic-only tolls with no booth to stop at, and you’re expected to pay within a few days at a CTT office or payment point. In Romania, the Roviniete vignette must be purchased before you use any national road. In both cases, missing a payment results in a fine sent to the vehicle’s registered address, sometimes weeks later.

Do I need a vignette just to pass through Switzerland?

Yes. Switzerland requires an annual motorway vignette for around CHF 40, regardless of how long you’re in the country. There’s no shorter option. Buy it at the border before joining the motorway.

Are Spanish motorways free now?

Mostly, but not entirely. The AP-7 along the Mediterranean coast is now free. Catalonia’s C-roads are still tolled, and so are several routes in the Basque Country. Budget for some toll costs if you’re doing a long Spanish run.

Do I need an International Driving Permit for Europe?

Not with a standard UK photocard driving licence. An IDP is only needed in certain territories outside the EU, or if you have a paper licence.

Can I work remotely from a van in the Schengen Area on a tourist stay?

Working for a UK employer while physically in Europe is generally tolerated. Working for a local EU employer is not. This is a grey area that hasn’t been tested in courts for most professions, and the answer differs between countries.

What’s different about van life in Europe if you hold an EU passport rather than a UK one?

Almost everything in this guide changes. EU citizens have no day limit in Schengen, aren’t subject to EES or ETIAS, can obtain and use EU pet passports, and have freedom of movement across all 27 EU member states. The practical effect is that EU-based van lifers can plan entirely around weather, climbing seasons, and preference rather than passport expiry windows. I’m Lithuanian, so none of the 90-day rules in this post applies to me personally, but they apply to the majority of UK-based van lifers I know, which is why this guide exists.

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