EESQueue
HomeAirports › EES in Belgium

EES in Belgium — airport status & traveller guide

Belgium has been in the Schengen Area since 1995-03-26. The EU Entry/Exit System is live at its external borders, registering non-EU travellers biometrically on first entry.

EES airports in Belgium

AirportEES statusKiosksFirst-entry est.
Brussels Airport BRULive61~7 min
Brussels South Charleroi Airport CRLLive~5 min

Current known issues

Brussels Airport (BRU): Loss of e-gate access overloaded manual booths; ~600 missed flights Apr 2026; govt called delays "unacceptable" May 10; airport CEO warned of "absolute chaos" for summer; Jun 9 arrivals hit 4h (BrusselsTimes)
Visiting more than one Schengen country? Your 90-day allowance is shared across all of them. Track it with the 90/180 calculator.
Live queues: see current first-entry and exit waits at Belgium's airports on our live EES wait times page.

EES essentials

Who does EES apply to?

EES applies to non-EU nationals travelling to the Schengen Area for short stays of up to 90 days in any 180-day period. That includes visa-exempt nationalities (US, UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Japan and others) as well as short-stay Schengen visa holders.

Who is exempt from EES?

EU, EEA (Norway, Iceland, Liechtenstein) and Swiss citizens are exempt. Also exempt: holders of long-stay (national) visas, holders of EU residence permits, diplomats and service-passport holders on official travel, NATO SOFA-status personnel, stateless persons with refugee travel documents, and holders of local border traffic permits.

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.

Will I still get a passport stamp?

Usually no. From 10 April 2026, passport stamping was discontinued as the default across the Schengen Area and entries are recorded digitally in EES. However, several countries — including Italy (until 30 September 2026), Belgium, Germany, France, Greece and Switzerland — have activated a formal "flex mode" that allows border police to revert to manual passport stamping whenever queues exceed set thresholds (e.g. 45 minutes in Italy, 25 minutes in Belgium). Stamps issued under flex mode are valid entry records.

Does EES apply at land borders?

Yes. EES applies at every external Schengen land border, including road crossings from the UK (Dover/Calais and the Eurotunnel), Turkey into Greece and Bulgaria, Moldova into Romania, and non-Schengen Balkan routes into Croatia and Slovenia. Expect longer queues at road crossings during the initial months.