Schengen Visa photo requirements
The Schengen visa photo is 35×45 mm with the head taking up 70–80% of the frame, a neutral expression with the mouth closed, a plain light-coloured (white or light grey) background, no glare or tinted lenses, and must be taken within the last 6 months. The rules derive from the EU Visa Code and ICAO Doc 9303 / ISO-IEC 19794-5 biometric standards.
L’essentiel
- Dimensions de la photo
- 35×45 mm
- Hauteur de la tête
- 70–80 % de la photo (menton au sommet du crâne)
- Ligne des yeux
- 50–65 % depuis le bas
- Arrière-plan
- WhiteLight grey
- Expression
- Neutre, bouche fermée
- Résolution de sortie
- 413×531 px à 300 dpi
- Taille de fichier maximale
- 10240 KB (JPEG)
Chaque règle, sourcée
Taille, forme et position de la tête
Source ↗The photo is 35×45 mm. It must be a close-up of your head and the top of your shoulders so that your face takes up 70–80% of the photograph, shown centred and in sharp focus. The photo must be no more than 6 months old.
Expression
Source ↗Use a neutral expression with your mouth closed. Smiling, an open mouth, or any non-neutral expression is not accepted.
Lunettes
Source ↗Glasses are allowed only if your eyes are clearly visible with no flash reflection off the lenses and no tinted lenses. Frames must not cover any part of your eyes; if possible avoid heavy frames and wear lighter-framed glasses. Many member states recommend removing glasses entirely.
Couvre-chefs (religieux / médical)
Source ↗Head coverings are not permitted except for religious reasons, and even then your facial features from the bottom of the chin to the top of the forehead and both edges of your face must be clearly shown.
Chapeaux et casquettes
Source ↗Hats and caps are not allowed. The head must be uncovered (other than a permitted religious covering that does not obscure the face).
Éclairage
Source ↗Use uniform lighting so that skin tones appear natural with appropriate brightness and contrast. There must be no shadows or flash reflections on your face.
Ombres
Source ↗The photo must show no shadows — neither behind your head nor across your face — and no flash reflections.
Arrière-plan
Source ↗Use a plain, light-coloured background (white or light grey), uniform and free of patterns, objects, or shadows. Note: some member states (e.g. France) require a light grey or blue-grey background rather than white — check the specific consulate where you apply.
Yeux rouges et flash
Source ↗The photo must show no red eye and no flash reflections on the skin. Position lighting or use diffused flash so the eyes are clear and natural.
Cheveux et obstruction du visage
Source ↗Both eyes must be open and clearly visible, with no hair across the eyes and nothing covering the face. Both edges of the face must be clearly shown.
Regard et yeux
Source ↗Look directly at the camera, facing square on — not over one shoulder (portrait style) and not tilted — with both eyes open and clearly visible.
Bébés et enfants
Source ↗An infant must appear alone in the photo (no chair backs, toys, or other people visible), looking at the camera with a neutral expression and the mouth closed. The same head-size and background rules apply.
Schengen visa photo requirements, in plain English
A Schengen visa photo is a biometric photo. The rules are set by the EU Visa Code (Regulation (EC) 810/2009) and follow the international ICAO Doc 9303 / ISO-IEC 19794-5 standard for travel-document portraits — the same standard used for biometric passports. That means the bar is stricter than a casual snapshot: a neutral face, even lighting, and a plain background are all enforced.
Size, head height, and position
Your photo must be 35×45 mm. It should be a close-up of your head and the top of your shoulders, framed so that your face fills 70–80% of the photograph, centred and in sharp focus. The photo must have been taken within the last 6 months, and most consulates ask for two identical copies.
Expression — neutral only
Unlike the US passport, the Schengen visa does not allow a smile. Use a neutral expression with your mouth closed. An open mouth, visible teeth, or any exaggerated expression will be rejected.
Looking at the camera
Face the camera square on — not turned over one shoulder ("portrait style") and not tilted. Both eyes must be open and clearly visible, with no hair across the eyes, and both edges of your face should be visible in the frame.
Glasses
Glasses are allowed only if your eyes stay clearly visible: there must be no flash reflection off the lenses and no tinted lenses, and the frames must not cover any part of your eyes. Lighter frames are preferred over heavy ones. Because reflections and frame thickness are common rejection reasons, many member states recommend removing glasses entirely.
Head coverings and hats
Hats and caps are not permitted. Head coverings are allowed only for religious reasons, and even then your facial features from the bottom of the chin to the top of the forehead, and both edges of your face, must be clearly shown.
Lighting, shadows, and red-eye
Use uniform lighting so your skin tones look natural with appropriate brightness and contrast. The photo must show no shadows — neither behind your head nor across your face — and no flash reflections on the skin or no red eye. Diffused light or careful flash placement avoids both.
Background
Use a plain, light-coloured background that is uniform and free of patterns, objects, or shadows — white or light grey satisfies the general standard. Note that some member states are stricter: France, for example, requires a light grey or blue-grey background rather than pure white, so always check the requirements of the specific consulate where you apply. Snapassport standardizes your background to a compliant colour automatically.
Infants and children
A child's photo follows the same rules with sensible allowances: the child must appear alone (no chair backs, toys, or other people visible), looking at the camera with a neutral expression and the mouth closed. The same head size and plain-background rules apply.
Foire aux questions
- Can you smile in a Schengen visa photo?
- No. The Schengen visa follows the ICAO biometric standard, which requires a neutral expression with the mouth closed. A smile, visible teeth, or an open mouth will be rejected.
- What size is a Schengen visa photo?
- 35×45 mm, taken as a close-up of your head and the top of your shoulders so that your face fills 70–80% of the frame. Two identical photos taken within the last 6 months are normally required.
- Can I wear glasses in a Schengen visa photo?
- Only if your eyes are fully visible with no glare or reflection off the lenses, no tint, and frames that do not cover your eyes. Lighter frames are preferred, and many consulates recommend removing glasses entirely to be safe.
Sources, vérifiées le 2026-06-15 : European Commission — Visa policy (Visa Code Regulation (EC) 810/2009) · ICAO — Photograph Guidelines (Annex A, Doc 9303 / ISO-IEC 19794-5)
Les règles évoluent. L’acceptation finale est toujours déterminée par l’autorité émettrice — Snapassport valide selon les exigences publiées, il ne se prononce pas.
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