Why Expats Choose Portugal
Portugal consistently ranks among the top five countries in the world for expats, according to surveys by InterNations and Expat Insider. In 2024, it placed #1 in Quality of Life and #2 in Ease of Settling In globally. That is not an accident — it is the result of decades of investment in infrastructure, healthcare, and a genuinely open attitude toward foreigners.
Here is what draws people from over 180 nationalities to call Portugal home:
- Safety: Portugal consistently ranks in the top 5 of the Global Peace Index. Street crime is low, and expats frequently describe feeling safer here than in their home countries.
- Weather: The Algarve and Lisbon enjoy over 300 sunny days per year. Even Porto — the rainiest major city — has far milder winters than most of Northern Europe or Canada.
- Language: English is widely spoken in cities, hotels, restaurants, and government offices. You can live a full life without speaking Portuguese, though learning the basics will always be appreciated.
- EU Access: As a Schengen member state, a Portuguese residency card gives you the freedom to travel visa-free across 26 European countries.
- Pathway to Citizenship: After five years of legal residency, you can apply for Portuguese citizenship — one of the most powerful passports in the world, granting visa-free access to 188+ countries.
- Internet & Infrastructure: Portugal has some of the fastest average internet speeds in Europe, consistently ranking in the top 10 for fixed broadband (avg. 200–300 Mbps in cities).
D7 Passive Income Visa – Overview
The D7 Visa (officially the "Passive Income Visa" or "Retirement Visa") is Portugal's most popular long-stay visa for non-EU nationals. It is designed for people who have a stable, regular income from outside Portugal — such as a pension, rental income, dividends, remote work salary, or business income.
It is not just for retirees. Freelancers, remote employees, and online entrepreneurs also use the D7 successfully.
Minimum Income Requirements (2025)
| Applicant Type | Monthly Income Required | Annual Total | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Main applicant | €760 / month | €9,120 | Based on Portuguese minimum wage |
| + Spouse / partner | + €380 / month | + €4,560 | 50% of main applicant |
| + Each child | + €228 / month | + €2,736 | 30% of main applicant |
Key Application Steps
- Open a Portuguese bank account and deposit at least 3–6 months of required income before applying.
- Obtain NIF (tax number) — you can do this remotely through a local fiscal representative.
- Gather documents: clean criminal record, proof of income, proof of accommodation in Portugal.
- Apply at the Portuguese consulate in your home country for the initial D7 visa (valid 4 months).
- Arrive in Portugal and book an appointment with SEF/AIMA to convert your visa into a 2-year residency permit.
- Renew for a further 3 years, then apply for permanent residency or citizenship after year 5.
Documents checklist, bank account tips, and how to avoid the most common rejections.
NHR Tax Regime – Overview
Portugal's Non-Habitual Resident (NHR) tax regime is one of the most attractive tax structures in Europe for incoming residents. Originally launched in 2009, the classic NHR offered a flat 20% income tax rate on Portuguese-source income and full exemption on most foreign income for 10 years.
In 2024, Portugal replaced the original NHR with NHR 2.0 (also called IFICI — Incentivo Fiscal à Investigação Científica e Inovação). The new version is more targeted but still highly beneficial for qualifying professionals.
NHR vs NHR 2.0 – Key Differences
| Feature | Classic NHR (pre-2024) | NHR 2.0 / IFICI (2024+) |
|---|---|---|
| Who qualifies | Any new resident (no profession restriction) | High-value professions, researchers, tech, start-up founders |
| Flat tax rate on PT income | 20% | 20% |
| Foreign pension income | 10% flat rate | Not covered (standard progressive rates apply) |
| Foreign employment income | Exempt (if taxed abroad) | Exempt (if in qualifying category) |
| Duration | 10 years | 10 years |
| Application deadline | Closed to new applicants | Apply within first year of residency |
Full eligibility checklist, application process, and how much tax you could save.
Cost of Living: Lisbon vs Porto
Portugal is significantly cheaper than Western European capitals like London, Paris, or Amsterdam — but it is not as cheap as it was five years ago. Lisbon in particular has seen rent prices surge by 40–60% since 2019. That said, your money still goes much further here than in most English-speaking countries.
Below is a realistic monthly budget breakdown for a single person living comfortably in each city:
| Expense Category | Lisbon (€/month) | Porto (€/month) | Savings in Porto |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rent – 1BR in city centre | €1,200 – €1,600 | €800 – €1,100 | ~30% less |
| Rent – 1BR outside centre | €850 – €1,100 | €600 – €800 | ~25% less |
| Groceries | €250 – €350 | €220 – €300 | Similar |
| Eating out (mid-range) | €250 – €400 | €200 – €350 | ~15% less |
| Transport (monthly pass) | €40 | €40 | Same |
| Utilities (electricity, gas, water) | €80 – €130 | €80 – €120 | Similar |
| Health insurance (private) | €30 – €80 | €30 – €80 | Same |
| Gym membership | €25 – €45 | €20 – €35 | ~20% less |
| Total (comfortable lifestyle) | €1,900 – €2,700 | €1,500 – €2,100 | €400+ savings |
Lisbon vs Porto: Which City Is Right for You?
| Factor | Lisbon | Porto |
|---|---|---|
| Vibe & size | Cosmopolitan capital, fast-paced | Compact, artistic, slower pace |
| Expat community | Very large & international | Growing, tight-knit community |
| Cost of living | Higher | ~20–30% cheaper overall |
| Nightlife & dining | World-class variety | Excellent, more local character |
| Beach access | 30–40 min to Cascais / Sesimbra | 20 min to Foz / Matosinhos beach |
| Airport connections | Excellent (LIS – major hub) | Very good (OPO – growing) |
| Best for | Networking, startups, younger crowd | Retirees, families, remote workers |
Healthcare in Portugal
Portugal has a two-tier healthcare system: a public national health service (SNS – Serviço Nacional de Saúde) and a thriving private sector. For expats, understanding both is important.
Public Healthcare (SNS)
Once you have legal residency in Portugal, you are entitled to register with a local health centre (Centro de Saúde) and access the public system. Public healthcare is very affordable — GP consultations cost €5–€7 with your SNS user card, and many treatments are free or heavily subsidised. However, waiting times can be long, especially for specialists.
Private Healthcare
Most expats opt for private health insurance for day-to-day care. The quality is excellent, English-speaking doctors are readily available in cities, and costs are a fraction of what you would pay in the US, Canada, or the UK's private sector.
| Healthcare Option | Typical Cost | Wait Time | English-speaking doctors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Public GP visit (SNS) | €5 – €7 | Days to weeks | Variable |
| Private GP consultation | €50 – €100 | Same day / next day | Common in cities |
| Private specialist | €80 – €180 | Days | Yes, widely available |
| Private health insurance (basic) | €30 – €50/month | — | Network covers most clinics |
| Private health insurance (comprehensive) | €70 – €150/month | — | Includes hospitals |
Top private healthcare providers include Lusíadas Saúde, CUF, and Hospital da Luz — all with English-speaking staff and modern facilities in Lisbon and Porto.
Safety & Internet Speed
Safety
Portugal is one of the safest countries in Europe and in the world. It has ranked in the top 6 of the Global Peace Index every year since 2017. Violent crime is extremely rare. Petty theft (pickpocketing) can occur in busy tourist areas like Alfama in Lisbon or Ribeira in Porto, but this is manageable with standard urban awareness — keep your phone out of your back pocket and be mindful on crowded trams.
Expats consistently describe feeling safe walking home late at night, even in city centres. Women travelling or living alone typically report a much greater sense of security than in their home countries.
Internet Speed & Digital Infrastructure
Portugal is an outstanding country for remote workers from a digital infrastructure perspective. According to Ookla's 2024 Speedtest rankings, Portugal ranks among the top 10 countries in Europe for fixed broadband speed, with an average download speed of around 220–260 Mbps in urban areas.
- Fibre optic is available in nearly all cities and many rural areas.
- Major providers: NOS, MEO, Vodafone. A 1 Gbps fibre plan costs €30–€45/month.
- Mobile data: 4G coverage is near-universal; 5G is rolling out rapidly in Lisbon and Porto.
- Co-working spaces are abundant — Lisbon alone has 150+ options, from €15/day to €200/month.