
If you have travelled to Europe before, you may no longer need to reapply for a fresh Schengen visa every single trip. Under the EU’s “cascade” rule for Indian nationals, a multi-entry Schengen visa for Indians can now be issued with 2-year and then 5-year validity, so eligible repeat travellers get years of visa-free-style access on one sticker. Most applicants we speak to have no idea they already qualify, or they assume the long-validity visa is automatic when it is not.
This guide explains what the cascade rule actually is, who qualifies, which consulates are granting long validity right now, and how to build a case that gets you the full validity instead of a single-trip visa. It draws on the official EU rule and on what our Schengen desk is seeing week to week. If you would rather have it handled for you, our team runs the whole process end to end through our Schengen visa service from Hyderabad, with a free eligibility check before you pay anything.
| What the cascade rule does | Lets eligible Indian repeat travellers get long-validity multiple-entry Schengen visas instead of single-trip ones |
| Validity tiers | Officially 2-year then 5-year; in practice consulates are mostly issuing 2–3 years, and a full 5-year is rare |
| Core eligibility | Two Schengen visas obtained and lawfully used in the previous three years |
| Visa fee (2026) | €90 (unchanged) — the long-validity visa costs the same as a single-entry one |
| Stay limit | 90 days in any 180-day period (the validity is longer, the stay rule is the same) |
| Where you apply | From India — applications must be made in your country of residence |
| Passport validity we advise | At least 6 years remaining, so a full 5-year visa can actually be issued |
| Biometrics | Not needed every time — repeat travellers are usually exempt for 59 months |
The Schengen cascade rule is a more favourable visa arrangement the European Commission adopted for Indian nationals on 18 April 2024, and it is now fully in force. Instead of judging each application only on the current trip, consulates reward a clean travel record with longer-validity multiple-entry visas that “cascade” upward over time (Source: EEAS, EU Delegation to India).
In practice it means a repeat Indian traveller can hold a Schengen visa valid for two, and later five, years, and travel in and out of the 29 Schengen countries freely during that period, as long as each visit stays within the 90-days-in-180 limit. The visa fee is the same €90 as a single-entry visa, so the long-validity visa is genuinely better value, not a paid upgrade.
One thing the cascade rule does not change: it does not extend how long you can stay. You still get a maximum of 90 days in any rolling 180-day window. What changes is how often you can go and for how many years, without refiling.
You qualify for the 2-year multiple-entry visa once you have obtained and lawfully used two Schengen visas within the previous three years. “Lawfully used” is the key phrase: you entered on the dates you stated, did not overstay, returned on time, and broke no visa conditions. On paper, the 2-year visa is then normally followed by a 5-year visa, provided your passport has enough validity left (Source: EEAS).
Here is the honest reality, though: while two used visas make you eligible to apply for a 5-year, consulates are currently issuing mostly 2 and 3-year validity, and a full 5-year is genuinely rare at this stage. Treat the 5-year as the best case you build towards, not the default you should expect.
A few clarifications that trip people up:
If you are a first-time Schengen applicant, you are not in the cascade yet, but that is not a dead end, and it does not mean single-entry by default. First-time applicants often receive a multiple-entry visa of around six months, depending on their profile. Weak finances, or a consulate’s doubt that you will return, can bring it down to a single-entry visa instead. Either way, your first one or two clean, approved trips are the investment that unlocks the 2-year and later 5-year visa, which is exactly why getting each application right matters.
Not sure where you stand? Send Ms Madhuri on our Schengen desk your last few visas and travel dates on WhatsApp at +91 99597 77776 for a free 15-minute eligibility check. We will tell you honestly whether to expect single-entry, 2-year, or 5-year, before you pay anything.
Here is the part the official text will not tell you. Across recent applications from our office, roughly 60% of eligible applicants have received long-term visas, typically 2 to 3 years, and the ones getting them are almost always clients who have already travelled. The cascade rewards a real travel history, and our approval pattern reflects that.
Which consulate you apply through matters more than most guides admit. Based on what we are seeing right now:
Remember that under Schengen rules you must apply to the country where you will spend the most nights, so you cannot simply pick the most generous consulate. But when your itinerary genuinely fits more than one country, this pattern is worth planning around. This is real desk observation, not the published rule, and it can shift, so we confirm the current picture case by case.
A realistic word on the 5-year. Even at the generous consulates, and even for clearly eligible clients, a full 5-year visa is uncommon right now. Most long-validity approvals we see land at 2 or 3 years. The 5-year does happen (see the family case below), but it is the exception, not what you should bank on. We would rather tell you that up front than sell you a number the consulate rarely gives.
Consulates look at your full travel history across all countries, but they weight your Europe travel from the last three years most heavily. Trips to the UK, US, Canada, Australia, or Japan help paint a picture of a genuine, returning traveller, and they are worth including. But the cascade itself is built on your prior Schengen visas, and that recent European record is what our desk sees consulates focus on when deciding validity.
The practical takeaway: keep copies of every prior visa and entry/exit stamp, and present your European trips clearly. A well-organised travel history sheet does more for your validity than another bank statement.
Even a cascade-eligible applicant can be downgraded to a short-validity visa, and it usually comes down to a handful of fixable issues we see repeatedly:
The reassuring part is that most of these are addressable before you apply, which is the whole point of a pre-submission review.
We advise clients to apply with at least six years of passport validity remaining if the goal is a full 5-year visa. A visa cannot outlast the passport it is stamped in, so a consulate inclined to give you five years will shorten it to match a passport that expires sooner. If your passport is within a few years of expiry and you are cascade-eligible, it is often worth renewing first so you do not waste the long-validity opportunity. (Note the Indian passport fee revision from 1 July 2026 if you are renewing now.)
No. If you have given biometrics before for a Schengen visa and used that visa, you are generally exempt from giving biometrics again for 59 months (just under five years), from any application location. That means a faster, lighter process for repeat travellers, often just a document submission without the fingerprinting step. You will still submit through VFS, and the exemption is confirmed case by case, but for most cascade applicants it removes one of the more tedious parts of reapplying.
Two documents do the heavy lifting for a long-validity request, beyond the standard Schengen documents checklist for Indians:
Add clean copies of your prior visas and a simple travel-history sheet, and you have a case that argues for itself.
Two recent, anonymised cases show how the cascade plays out in practice:
Neither result was luck. Both came from applicants with real, well-presented travel histories applying through the right consulate for their itinerary.
Our Schengen desk does four things that decide whether you get single-entry or a 5-year visa: we assess your history honestly before you pay, tell you which validity to realistically expect, build the cover letter and financial story that argues for the longest term you qualify for, and file through the consulate that fits your itinerary and tends to grant long validity. We have filed thousands of Schengen applications since 2011 and hold a 95%+ approval rate on the cases we accept.
If a multi-year visa is within reach for you, it is worth doing right the first time. A long-validity visa saves you years of reapplying, and the fee is the same €90 either way. Pair it with our Europe tour packages from Hyderabad and one coordinator handles both the visa and the trip.
Ready to check your cascade eligibility? WhatsApp our Schengen team on +91 99597 77776 with your destination, dates, and prior travel. Free 15-minute eligibility review, no payment up front.
Under the EU cascade rule, an Indian national qualifies for a 2-year multiple-entry visa after obtaining and lawfully using two Schengen visas in the previous three years, which officially makes you eligible to apply for a 5-year on the next application. In practice, though, consulates are currently issuing mostly 2 to 3-year validity, and a full 5-year remains rare. Long validity is not automatic; the consulate decides based on your travel record, finances, and passport validity.
The cascade itself is based on your prior Schengen visas. Trips to the UK, US, Canada, Australia, and Japan support your overall profile as a genuine returning traveller and are worth including, but consulates weight your recent Europe travel most heavily when deciding validity.
Not a 5-year, no; that comes through the cascade after prior visas. But first-time applicants are not limited to single-entry either. Many receive a multiple-entry visa of around six months depending on their profile, while weak finances or a consulate’s doubt that you will return can result in a single-entry visa. Your first clean, approved trips are what unlock the 2-year and later 5-year visa.
No. The stay limit is still 90 days within any 180-day period. The cascade extends how many years the visa is valid and how often you can enter, not how long you can stay per visit.
As a working benchmark, we advise showing at least ₹10 lakh for a 15-day trip, well documented and consistent with your income tax returns. Weak or unexplained finances are a common reason a cascade-eligible applicant is downgraded to a short visa.
Usually not. If you gave biometrics for a previous Schengen visa and used that visa, you are generally exempt from giving them again for 59 months, which simplifies the process for repeat travellers.
In our recent experience, France, Switzerland, Spain, and the Netherlands have been the most generous with long validity, while Scandinavian consulates tend to default to shorter terms. You must still apply where you will spend the most nights, so the best consulate depends on your itinerary.
Last updated: July 2026. Written by Ms Madhuri, Senior Visa Consultant on IMAD Travel’s Schengen desk, Banjara Hills, Hyderabad. IMAD Travel Pvt Ltd is IATA-accredited, certified by the Ministry of Tourism of India, and has filed 5,000+ visa applications since 2011. For a free Schengen eligibility review, WhatsApp Ms Madhuri at +91 99597 77776.
Sources: EEAS (EU Delegation to India) — European Commission cascade adoption 18 Apr 2024 (EY, KPMG). IMAD Schengen desk data, July 2026.