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The EU's new Entry/Exit System is now operating at Málaga Airport — and it's changing the passport control experience for millions of visitors to the Costa del Sol. Here's what it means for your trip, what to expect at the border, and how to avoid the queues.
The Entry/Exit System — known as EES — is the EU's new digital border management system, replacing the traditional passport stamp. Every time a non-EU national crosses into or out of the Schengen Area, the system records their biometric data: a facial image, fingerprints (for travellers aged 12 and over), the date and location of entry, and the expected date of departure.
Your data is held in a central EU database for three years from your last exit from the Schengen Area (or five years if there is no exit record — for example, if you overstay your permitted 90 days). Once registered, future border crossings are faster: you provide a fingerprint or facial scan at the kiosk and the system matches you to your existing profile, with no need to go through the full registration process again.
EES has been active at Málaga–Costa del Sol Airport since October 2025. Full mandatory implementation across all Schengen borders is set for 9 April 2026, with a flexibility period allowing countries to temporarily ease checks during peak travel periods through to September 2026.
EES applies to non-EU, non-Schengen nationals travelling to Spain for short stays — holidays, visits, or business trips of up to 90 days in any 180-day period. In practice, this primarily affects UK citizens (post-Brexit), holders of US, Canadian, and Australian passports, and most other nationalities who do not need a Schengen visa.
It does not apply to EU citizens or nationals of other Schengen member states. It also does not apply to legal residents in Spain who hold a valid TIE card.
The first time you arrive at a Schengen border under EES, the process takes longer than a standard passport check. Border officers or self-service kiosks will scan your passport, capture a facial image, take your fingerprints, and record the date, time, and location of your entry. Allow extra time for your first crossing.
On return trips within the three-year period, the process is quicker. You provide a fingerprint or facial scan at the kiosk and the system matches you to your existing profile. No need to register again.
EES records both entry and exit. When you leave the Schengen Area, your departure is automatically registered — replacing the exit stamp in your passport.
Málaga–Costa del Sol Airport began rolling out EES in October 2025. During the winter of 2025–26, Málaga was one of the most affected airports in Europe, with passport control queues of over two hours during the peak Christmas period. Ryanair urged passengers to arrive at least three hours before their flight at Spanish airports.
Spain's Interior Ministry has invested €83 million to adapt all 124 of the country's border crossing points — airports, ports, and land borders — to the technical requirements of EES, including the installation of self-service kiosks, e-gates, and staffed officer workstations. AENA has installed over 1,200 EES kiosks across the country.
Ahead of summer 2026, Spain is setting up dedicated passport control lanes at Málaga, Palma de Mallorca, Ibiza, and Menorca, designed to reduce the long queues seen during the winter.
Allow extra time. The initial EES registration adds several minutes at the border. Arrive at the airport at least 30–45 minutes earlier than you normally would, and more during peak periods.
Keep your passport in good condition. EES kiosks rely on machine-readable passports. Damaged passports may not scan correctly.
Use the kiosks if available. Self-service kiosks typically process registration faster than staffed counters when the system is working correctly.
Avoid peak times. Early morning and late evening flights tend to have shorter passport control queues.
If you are a UK citizen legally resident in Spain and hold a TIE card, the Interior Ministry has confirmed that you are exempt from EES registration. In practice, join the non-EU queue and present your TIE card at a staffed counter. Do not use the self-service EES kiosks — if you do so by mistake, the system will register you as a tourist under the 90-day limit rather than as a legal resident.
ETIAS — the European Travel Information and Authorisation System — is a separate, additional requirement coming later, similar to the US ESTA. It is expected to launch in the final quarter of 2026, with mandatory use from 2027. It is not yet required and is an entirely different system from EES.