From 12 October, British travellers heading for Spain’s late‑season sun will be met by a tougher, more automated Schengen border. Rules that once felt theoretical now decide who glides through passport control and who gets pulled aside. Here’s what really changes, what border officers are looking for, and the five key checks you need to pass to avoid a ruined trip.
What actually changes in Spain on 12 october?
On 12 October, the European Union’s new Entry/Exit System (EES) switches on across the Schengen area, including Spain. For UK citizens, that means every short stay is logged in a shared EU database.
Your first crossing after 12 October will be slower: expect fingerprints, a live photo and more questions at the booth.
Under EES, British nationals are treated as “third‑country” visitors. Each time you arrive or leave the Schengen zone, border staff will scan your passport and the system will automatically record:
- the date and place you arrived
- the date and place you left
- your biometric data (fingerprints and facial image) from your first visit
- how long you have stayed in the zone in the last 180 days
Paper passport stamps will gradually disappear once EES is fully embedded, although you may still receive a stamp during the transition period while systems bed in.
You do not need to download an app, fill in a form or pay a fee in advance. All EES checks take place at the border.
The 5 checks Brits must pass at the Spanish border
1. Passport dates that meet Schengen rules
Spanish border officers start with your passport. Two dates matter more than anything else, and both must be right on the day you travel.
The 10‑year issue date rule
Your passport must be less than 10 years old on the day you arrive in Spain. The check is based on the printed “date of issue”, not the expiry date.
Many older UK passports issued before late 2018 include extra months carried over from the previous document. Those bonus months no longer count for Schengen entry.
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If your passport was issued more than 10 years before your arrival date, Spanish border staff can refuse you even if it has not expired.
The 3‑month expiry buffer
The second rule looks at how close you are to the expiry date when you plan to leave.
- Your passport must be valid for at least three months after the day you plan to leave the Schengen area.
- The buffer applies to your exit date, not your arrival date.