Your Rights
What can you do now that you couldn't before? What's coming, and when? And what you give up. Benefits arrive in stages, not all on accession day.
Data verified as of 15 Jun 2026
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Already real
Concrete rights you already have today.
- RightLive now
Visa-free travel to the Schengen area
Short stays of up to 90 days in any 180-day period across the Schengen area, with a biometric passport. In force since December 2009.
From 19 Dec 2009Primary sourcePublications Office of the EU — EUR-Lex - BenefitLive now
Lower EU roaming charges
Cheaper data roaming between the Western Balkans and the EU since 1 October 2023 — a step toward, not yet, full "roam like at home".
From 1 Oct 2023Primary sourceEuropean Commission (DG NEAR) - BenefitLive now
Free-trade access to the EU (SAA)
The Stabilisation and Association Agreement, in force since May 2010, removes most customs tariffs on trade with the EU.
From 1 May 2010Primary sourceEuropean Commission (DG NEAR)
Phasing in now
Gradual access to parts of the single market, before full membership.
- Obligation
Mandatory regulatory alignment
The country must adopt EU product, food-safety, environmental and data standards; some current domestic practices will no longer be allowed.
On accession day
The automatic EU-citizenship bundle. No application needed.
- Right
Live, work and study anywhere in the EU
On accession day every citizen becomes an EU citizen, with the right to move freely across the Union (some worker rights may phase in; see below).
- Right
Vote in local and European elections where you live
EU citizens can vote and stand in municipal and European Parliament elections in the member state where they reside.
- Right
EU consular protection abroad
Outside the EU, in a country where your own state has no embassy, you can seek help from any other EU member state’s consulate.
- Right
EHIC: healthcare across the EU
The European Health Insurance Card gives access to state-provided healthcare when travelling in the EU.
- Obligation
Common external tariff (customs union)
The country adopts the EU’s common trade policy toward non-EU countries and gives up setting its own tariffs independently.
- Restriction
Limits on state aid to industry
EU state-aid rules constrain how much government support domestic industries can receive.
Phased in after joining
Some rights and funds phase in over years after joining.
- Right
Full free movement of workers
Some current members may apply transitional limits on the new member’s workers for up to ~7 years after accession, as in past enlargements.
Estimated: up to ~7 years after accessionPrimary sourceEuropean Commission (DG NEAR) - Benefit
CAP farm payments
Common Agricultural Policy direct payments to farmers typically phase in gradually after joining.
- Benefit
The euro is separate, and later
Joining the EU does NOT mean adopting the euro. That is a separate process requiring the Maastricht criteria and can take years; some members never adopt it.
- Obligation
From net recipient toward net contributor
Over time the country shifts from receiving more from the EU budget than it pays in, toward contributing.
Questions & myths
Straight answers to the questions that cause the most worry: money, sovereignty, and daily life.
Myth-bustingDoes joining the EU mean we adopt the euro?
No, not automatically. The euro is a separate, later process requiring the Maastricht convergence criteria; it can take years, and some members have never adopted it.Will I be able to live and work anywhere in the EU on day one?
You become an EU citizen on accession day, but free movement of workers can face transitional periods (up to ~7 years) imposed by some members.Myth-bustingIs there an "EU passport" I apply for?
No. EU citizenship is automatic on accession day. No application, no queue. Your national passport is gradually reissued in the common EU (burgundy) format, but your rights begin on accession day.What do we give up by joining?
Real changes, framed neutrally: the EU’s common external tariff (no independent third-country trade policy), limits on state aid, mandatory regulatory alignment, and over time shifting toward a net budget contributor.Can a single member state block us forever?
Every cluster opening, every chapter closing, the treaty and ratification require unanimity of all 27, so a single member can stall the process. This is the main reason the timeline is uncertain.Myth-bustingWill we really join as soon as the government hopes?
Government target years are political goals, not facts; independent estimates usually skew later. See the Forecast page for the range, not a promise.