Schengen visa, in refugee travel document from USA

Upvote:1

The visa validity is what determines the length of your stay. If your visa is valid till 24 Jun then you can stay inside Schengen till that date, period. Edit: I am wrong, some visas do have a specified length of stay, see my comment on @GayotFow's answer.

While it is impossible to answer the other half with surety without seeing the visa, I have some plausible explanation.

The XXA part could indicate "Stateless person" as per the Machine readable passport Wikipedia article.

The letters US could simply stand for the US providing you with your refugee document.

Finally, here's a presentation on the "new" visas. You will see that there's a check digit followed by the nationality of the holder represented by a three letter code. 5 and EST is at least suspicious to be that.

Upvote:5

Territorial limitations are listed in the visible region of the Schengen visa (as opposed to the machine readable region).

For your specific question: "is this meaning that i cannot go to estonia (not that i plan) or that i can go?!", the answer is NO. A restriction against Estonia (issued by a Spanish consulate) would look like...

ESTADOS SCHENGEN (-EE)

Meaning all states except Estonia. The minus sign means 'except' and EE is the abbreviation for Estonia. The text would appear at the top of the harmonized region and would be plainly visible.

For your other question(s): While the text you gave cannot be positively decoded without seeing the visa itself, it is likely you are referring to the 'remarks' section of the Machine Readable Zone. This section is available (as an option) for each member state to use for their own purposes. The best guess is that you are stateless (XXA) you applied in the USA (US) to a Spanish consulate (ES) in a location or code signified by 'T' (possibly turΓ­stico). In all events, if you are travelling as stateless you would not expect to see your former nationality identified. But only a scan along with the consulate operations manual can tell for sure.

For the remaining question, if you were issued 9 days then you would want to regulate your itinerary such that you used only 9 days. It may be possible to go underground, but it's emphatically not recommended.

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