Lyon Saint-Exupéry Airport (LYS) — EES status & queues
Colombier-Saugnieu, Rhône, France · Live
No live report right now — these are typical estimates, and we never invent numbers. Compare all airports →
EES has been live at Lyon Saint-Exupéry 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
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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 Colombier-Saugnieu, Rhône
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Some airlines still show outdated pre-EES information during check-in.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.
Other EES airports in France
Charles de Gaulle Airport (CDG) · Paris-Orly Airport (ORY) · Nice-Côte d'Azur Airport (NCE) · Marseille Provence Airport (MRS) · Toulouse-Blagnac Airport (TLS) · Bordeaux-Mérignac Airport (BOD) · Nantes Atlantique Airport (NTE) · EuroAirport Basel-Mulhouse-Freiburg (BSL)
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.