Ireland is not part of the Schengen Area so Schengen visas are not valid in Ireland (or the UK). You may need a visa unless you hold a passport from a country which doesn't need a visa for Ireland (e.g. USA). Check the Irish embassy for your country to see their rules.
Yes, you need a separate visa for Ireland. Ireland is not part of the Schengen Area. Schengen visas are not valid.
Can Albanian citizen travel to ireland on schengen visa?AnswerNo, because Ireland is not part of the Schengen Area. Schengen visas are not valid.
Ireland is not part of the Schengen Area. Schengen visas are not valid.
You need to apply to the Spanish Embassy in Vietnam. A Schengen visa is a visa that allows you to go to all the countries in the Schengen Area. Once you are legally in the Schengen Area, you can freely travel to any other Schengen country.
No. Cyprus is not part of the Schengen Area. A Schengen visa is not valid in Cyprus.
Citizens of EU and Schengen countries (including Ireland) have the right to come and go in the EU and Schengen area without restriction. No visas are required, and there is no time limits on the stay.
It depends on what nationality you are. Switzerland is part of the Schengen Agreement. The list of which countries do and do not need a visa is the same for all Schengen countries. Citizens of all EU and Schengen countries can enter Switzerland without a visa; plus citizens of some other countries.
Yes. Go to the embassy of the country you intend to visit (in Saudi Arabia) and ask what forms and papers you need to submit to get a Schengen Visa.
Hallo, scince you've got your Schengen visa. it's quite all right for the trip to Spain as the Schengen area covers Spain. Don't worry. everything's ok.
If your are a European citizen you do not need a visa If you are from a visa waiver country you do not need a visa if your stay is less than 90 days If you are none of these go to the French embassy in London
If you've already had a Schengen Visa then go to an European coutry signed the Schengen Agreement, of course you could go to other Schengen countries.
If you leave the Schengen area and go to a non-Schengen country, and then re-enter the Schengen area later, the "clock" starts again from zero. If you do not need a Schengen visa, this is an advantage. If you do need a visa, it is a disadvantage as you need to get a multiple-entry visa. So, if you plan in a trip outside Schengen in the middle of your travels, you can get 2 x 90 days. For example, if you are in France, you could do a trip to London, as the UK is not in Schengen.