EESQueue

Francisco de Sá Carneiro Airport (OPO) — EES status & queues

Porto, Portugal · Live

Entry wait now
55 min typical
typical for now
Est. exit wait
~2 min
quiet right now · from flights
Busiest hour
05:00
24 flights scheduled

No live reports yet — these figures are modelled from today’s flight schedule (busier hours mean longer queues), not measured. Seen the real queue? Report it below. Compare all airports →

When it's busiest

Scheduled flights — departures plus arrivals — across a typical Sunday, a proxy for how busy the border is likely to be. Expect the biggest crowds around 05:00.

000408121620
QuietModerateBusyPeakBusiest hour

Flights here run 2 min late on average, and 5% land 15+ min behind schedule (last 30 days, 210 flights tracked).

Compare flight volume across EES hub airports →

Current known issues: Portugal can pause biometric capture up to 6 hrs per peak session; queues down to ~30 min by Jun 2026; extra booths planned; ANA expanded self-service pre-registration kiosks; formally named in Portugal's EC suspension notification (Reg. EU 2025/1534) alongside Lisbon and Faro; PSP deploying 360 extra officers across Portuguese airports Jul 2026
Worst reported queue: 30 min — June 2026.

Seen the EES queue? Report the wait

Help other travellers — your report feeds the live wait times above once verified.

EES live since
2026-04-10
Self-service kiosks
Not disclosed

EES has been live at Francisco de Sá Carneiro Airport since 2026-04-10. First-time registration — passport scan, four fingerprints and a facial image — takes roughly 5 minutes per traveller. Self-service kiosks handle biometric enrolment — use them rather than the staffed-booth queue where you can. Returning travellers already enrolled clear in about a minute via facial-recognition gates.

What happens at the EES kiosk

  1. Approach a self-service EES kiosk or booth. At most major Schengen airports, follow the signs for "Non-EU / EES Registration" after disembarking. Kiosks are typically placed before the staffed immigration booths.
  2. Scan your passport. Place your passport photo page down on the reader. The kiosk scans the MRZ (machine-readable zone) and confirms your identity. Make sure your chipped biometric passport is intact — damaged chips trigger a manual fallback.
  3. Provide fingerprints. Place four fingers (excluding the thumb) flat on the scanner when prompted, first right hand then left. Children under 12 skip this step.
  4. Capture facial image. Look straight at the camera with no hat, sunglasses, or face covering. Neutral expression. The kiosk validates the image against your passport photo.
  5. Answer any border questions. Most travelers are waved through. Some are directed to a staffed booth for standard purpose-of-visit and length-of-stay questions. Have proof of onward travel and accommodation ready.
  6. Collect receipt and proceed — no passport stamp. The kiosk prints a small entry receipt. Your entry is now recorded digitally; no physical stamp is added to your passport. Keep the receipt for your records until you exit the Schengen Area.

Tips for Porto

EES is at the border, not at domestic transit

Once inside Schengen, moving between member states (e.g. Paris to Rome) does not trigger a new EES check. EES only applies at external Schengen borders.

EES applies even if your airline did not brief you

Some airlines still show outdated pre-EES information during check-in. Plan around EES yourself — your airline’s guidance is not the final word on what happens at the border.

Your first entry takes the longest

First-entry biometric enrolment typically runs 3–7 minutes. Returning entries within your 3-year record drop to 30–60 seconds. Plan your first post-April-2026 trip with extra buffer.

Use self-service kiosks when available

Self-service EES kiosks are almost always faster than the staffed booth queue. Major hubs have 20+ kiosks per terminal; use them unless directed otherwise.

Planning multiple trips? Make sure you stay inside 90 days per 180 with the Schengen 90/180 calculator. See also the Portugal EES guide.

Other EES airports in Portugal

Lisbon Airport (LIS) · Faro Airport (FAO) · Madeira International Airport Cristiano Ronaldo (FNC)

EES FAQ

What is EES?

The Entry/Exit System (EES) is an EU-wide digital border system that replaces passport stamping for non-EU nationals entering the Schengen Area for short stays. It records each traveler’s name, passport data, date and place of entry and exit, and biometric data (four fingerprints plus a facial image) at a self-service kiosk or staffed booth on first entry.

Do I need to use the kiosk every time I enter?

Yes for the biographic and exit check — but only the first entry requires full biometric enrolment. On subsequent entries within the 3-year retention window, the system reuses your stored biometrics; most airports use facial recognition at a fast lane, which typically completes in 30–60 seconds.

How long does first-entry EES registration take?

Typically 3 to 7 minutes per traveler on first entry, depending on the airport, kiosk availability, and language selection. Families and groups should expect longer total times. Airports with pre-registration apps (Finland, Netherlands, some French terminals) can shorten this to under 2 minutes.

What about returning travelers?

Returning travelers who have already been enrolled typically spend 30 seconds to 1 minute at the border. Most Schengen airports now route returning EES travelers through dedicated facial-recognition gates, which are faster than the old manual stamping queues.

Is EES the same as ETIAS?

No. EES is a border check: you complete biometric registration at a kiosk or booth on arrival at a Schengen airport, land crossing, or port. ETIAS (expected to start in late 2026, becoming mandatory in 2027) is a separate online travel authorization you apply for before your flight — similar to the US ESTA. Visa-exempt travelers will eventually need both: ETIAS approved in advance, and EES registration on arrival.

Last verified: 2026-07-12. Estimates are for planning only — verify with the airport and the official EU EES page before travel.