Moderate impact· SPU · Split, Croatia

EES at Split AirportEntry/Exit System arrival delays at SPU

Arriving from outside the EU at Split? Your first crossing under the EES includes biometric enrolment — fingerprints and a facial image — which adds time at passport control during busy arrival banks.

Estimated · not a live feed
Estimated +20–50 min at summer peaks

First-entry biometric enrolment. Editorial estimate of added time at peak — no public live EES queue feed exists yet.

Flying out of Split? The estimate above is arrival-side, at passport control. The departure side — security screening — is tracked live by our sister site FlightQueue.

FQSPU departure security waits
Croatia

Other EES airports

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EES questions

What is the EES (Entry/Exit System)?
The EES is the EU’s automated Entry/Exit System. It records non-EU travellers crossing the Schengen external border — capturing four fingerprints and a facial image on first entry, then logging each entry and exit electronically instead of stamping passports.
When did the EES start?
The EES began a phased roll-out on 12 October 2025 and reached full operation across participating countries during spring 2026. Travellers are now registered biometrically at most Schengen external-border crossings.
Does the EES cause longer queues at the border?
First-time registration takes longer than a passport stamp because biometrics are captured, so airports and ports saw the biggest delays during the initial roll-out and at peak banks of arrivals. Once you are enrolled, later crossings are faster. Our per-country and per-airport estimates flag where first-entry queues are heaviest.
Which countries use the EES?
The EES applies across the Schengen area — the EU Schengen states plus Iceland, Norway, Switzerland and Liechtenstein. Ireland is outside Schengen and continues to stamp passports. The biggest non-EU traveller volumes are at hubs in Spain, France, Italy, Germany, the Netherlands, Portugal, Greece and Croatia.
Do UK and US citizens have to register for the EES?
Yes. The EES applies to non-EU nationals on short stays (up to 90 days in any 180), which includes UK, US, Australian, Canadian and most other visa-exempt visitors. You complete biometric registration the first time you enter after the system went live.
Is the EES the same as ETIAS?
No. The EES is a biometric entry/exit record taken at the border. ETIAS is a separate, pre-travel authorisation (similar to the US ESTA) that visa-exempt visitors will buy online for around €20 before they travel. ETIAS is expected to start after the EES is fully bedded in — currently signalled for late 2026.
How long does EES biometric registration take?
The capture itself is quick — fingerprints and a photo take roughly a minute per traveller at a kiosk or booth. The delay comes from throughput: when a wide-body bank of non-EU arrivals all enrol at once, queues build. Allow extra connection time at large hubs during your first post-roll-out trip.
Will the EES affect Dover, Eurostar and Le Shuttle?
Those UK departure points use juxtaposed controls, where French border officers process EES registration on UK soil before you leave. Coach passengers at Dover and rail passengers at London St Pancras (Eurostar) were flagged as the highest-risk pinch points during roll-out because large groups register at once.
Editorial estimate · not a live feed · verify timings before travel