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With respect, this is slightly wrong. There is no doubt you will be able to visit Spain with a valid Belgium-issued Schengen visa. However Schengen country embassies are very strict about misusing their visas and require you to at least have used the visa to visit the country that issued the visa. They do not tolerate what they call "visa shopping" by people after Schengen visas.VictoriaS wrote:Yes, you can. The visa is valid for travel anywhere in the Schengen area.
Victoria
Can you quote the legislation on this please.Siggi wrote: The Schengen rules , state that the first port of entry must be the country from whom you have received the Schengen visa.
Whilst you will have no problems using your Belguim issued Schengen on entrie into Spain, without visiting Belguim first.
If you apply for another Schengen visa in the future they may reject it on grounds of Schengen rule abuse.
The other thing to say, is if you have a 6 month multi entry Schengen issused say from Belguim and in the 6 months you go to Spain France Italy and a few other Schengen States, make sure that you visit Belguim for 60% of all Schengen visits, otherwise you are in breach again of the rules.
John, if the Belgium embassy had any doubt as to whether the visa was misused or not, the onus of proof would be on the visa holder to prove that he went to Belgium, not on the Belgian embassy to prove that he did not. From what I've heard from friends who have been accused of misusing their Schengen visas, the embassies are ruthless on this.John wrote:But I am not even sure that the quote from the French website is correct, or complete! The rules say that you apply to the country which is your main destination, but go on to say that if there is no main destination, you apply to the country you will first enter.
The problem as regards the example mentioned above, how would Belgium know, unless they ask, if the visa was used to visit that country? That is, if someone travel on the train, or ferry, to France, and then on to Belgium, which is indeed their main destination, there would be no stamps in the passport to show that, given the totally open border, for example, on the road from Calais into Belgium.
This is also on the French Embassy website: http://www.consulfrance-londres.org/art ... rticle=323John wrote:But I am not even sure that the quote from the French website is correct, or complete! The rules say that you apply to the country which is your main destination, but go on to say that if there is no main destination, you apply to the country you will first enter.
The problem as regards the example mentioned above, how would Belgium know, unless they ask, if the visa was used to visit that country? That is, if someone travel on the train, or ferry, to France, and then on to Belgium, which is indeed their main destination, there would be no stamps in the passport to show that, given the totally open border, for example, on the road from Calais into Belgium.