TL;DR β Key Takeaways
- βLog trips manually, via AI parsing (paste itinerary text), or bulk CSV import.
- βPer-country risk cards show your proximity to tax residency thresholds in real time.
- βThe what-if simulator tests hypothetical future trips without committing them to your log.
- βAll trips feed the Schengen calculator automatically β no double entry.
- βYour travel log is exportable as CSV for tax professionals who need it.
Every nomad has that moment at passport control β mentally doing arithmetic, trying to remember if it was 87 days or 91, wondering if the border agent is about to ask you to step aside.
It's an avoidable feeling. The Residency Tracker in keepmore.money is your running tally so you always know the actual number β not an estimate.
Log your trips once. Get live risk scores, Schengen counts, and year-end exports β no spreadsheet required.
Try it free βThree Ways to Log Trips
Manual entry is the default: country, start date, end date, visa type, optional notes. About 30 seconds per trip once you're in a rhythm.
AI trip parsing is faster when you're catching up. Paste a flight itinerary, an email confirmation, or plain text like "flew Dubai to Lisbon on March 4, stayed until April 9" β and it converts it into a clean log entry. No template, no reformatting. Nomads with six months of backlog have caught up in under ten minutes using this.
CSV import is for the batch-upload crowd. Download the template, fill it in, upload. Useful if you've been keeping your own spreadsheet and want to migrate the history over rather than start from scratch.
Per-Country Risk Scores
Once your trips are logged, the tracker generates a risk card for each country you've visited. The score pulls together days logged vs. the residency threshold, visa type, overstay risk, and how close you are to triggering local tax residency.
Green: comfortably under. Yellow: pay attention. Red: you've crossed or are very close to a threshold β which might be exactly what you planned, or might not.
The point isn't to alarm you. It's to surface what you'd otherwise calculate manually, on a spreadsheet, in a panic, the night before a flight.
The What-If Simulator
This is the feature that changes how you plan trips. Instead of guessing whether "a few more weeks in Spain" is fine or risky, you add the hypothetical trip β say, Spain, June 15 to July 5 β and immediately see what it does to your day counts and risk scores without committing anything to your actual log.
Will another month in Berlin push you over the German residency threshold? Will extending your Portugal stay eat too far into your Schengen allowance? The simulator answers both questions before you open a booking site.
Everything Connects
Trips logged here feed the Schengen 90/180 Tracker automatically β no double entry. They also feed the Alerts engine, so if you're approaching a threshold in a watched country, an alert fires without you checking manually.
At year end, export your full log as a CSV. Handing a clean, date-sorted travel history to a tax professional is dramatically more useful than a folder of boarding passes.
Log your last three months of trips today. Fifteen minutes, and you'll have a number you can actually trust.
