TL;DRPortugal’s October 2025 nationality law reform changed the residency requirement for citizenship from 5 years to 10 years for general non-EU applicants and from 5 years to 7 years for CPLP nationals (Brazil, Angola, Cabo Verde, Mozambique, Guinea-Bissau, São Tomé and Príncipe, Equatorial Guinea, East Timor). The residency clock now starts on the date your first residence card is issued — not the application date — costing many applicants 6–18 extra months because of AIMA backlogs. The reform also makes the integration test mandatory, tightens children’s citizenship by birth, and closes the Sephardic Jewish heritage route. Applications fully submitted before the reform’s effective date may still be assessed under the old 5-year rule. Permanent residency remains achievable at 5 years and gives full work, study, and EU-area travel rights without an EU passport. Portugal still allows dual citizenship, so a Portuguese passport remains one of the strongest additive citizenships in the world — just a longer climb to reach it.
Affected by Portugal’s new 10-year rule?
Book a 30-minute strategy call with Ankit. We’ll review your current residency status, your route (D7 / D8 / D2 / Golden Visa / Tech Visa), the date your residence card was issued, and tell you whether Portugal is still the right path — or whether Spain, Italy, Greece, or a CBI alternative beats it now. The $100 fee is fully credited toward our $5,000–$7,000 done-for-you service if you engage us.
Quick facts: Portugal citizenship in 2026
Europe · EU 10-year rule for Non-EU 7-year rule for CPLP
Portugal Naturalisation (Law 37/81, amended Oct 2025)
Legal basis: Lei da Nacionalidade (Law 37/81), as amended by the 2025 nationality reform package.
Where you apply: Instituto dos Registos e Notariado (IRN) in Portugal, Portuguese consulate abroad, or online via the IRN portal.
Processing time after eligibility: 18–36 months from filing to decision, on top of the 10-year (or 7-year) residency clock.
| Applicant type | Residency required (old → new) | Language | Integration test | Path to passport |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-EU citizen (D7/D8/D2/Golden Visa/Tech Visa) | 5 yrs → 10 yrs | A2 Portuguese | Mandatory | 10 yrs + 18–36 mo processing |
| CPLP citizen (Brazil, Angola, etc.) | 5 yrs → 7 yrs | A2 Portuguese | Mandatory | 7 yrs + 18–36 mo processing |
| EU citizen | 5 yrs (unchanged) | A2 Portuguese | Mandatory | 5 yrs + 18–36 mo processing |
| Spouse of Portuguese citizen | 3 yrs of marriage + ties | A2 Portuguese | Mandatory | 3 yrs + processing |
| Child of Portuguese citizen (by descent) | Immediate (registration) | None for minors | None | Birth/registration |
What changed in Portugal’s citizenship law in 2026?
Five specific changes are reshaping every applicant’s plan:
- Residency requirement raised from 5 → 10 years for general non-EU applicants and from 5 → 7 years for CPLP citizens.
- Residency clock now starts at residence-card issuance, not application date — a material change because AIMA backlogs routinely add 6–18 months between application and card.
- Mandatory integration test covering Portuguese history, geography, civic structure, and constitutional values, in addition to the existing CIPLE A2 language test.
- Children born in Portugal to non-Portuguese parents no longer get automatic citizenship; a parent must have been legally resident for a minimum period (typically 5 years) at the time of birth.
- Sephardic Jewish heritage route closed to new applicants; only pending applications continue under prior rules.
When did Portugal change the citizenship law from 5 to 10 years?
The reform follows years of debate over Portugal’s perceived “naturalisation tourism” — the use of D7, D8, and Golden Visa programmes by non-EU nationals seeking an EU passport in 5 years. Critics argued the timeline was the shortest in Western Europe; supporters argued it powered the post-pandemic real-estate and digital-nomad economy. The 10-year compromise aligns Portugal with the EU average (Germany 8 yrs, France 5 yrs but discretionary, Spain 10 yrs, Italy 10 yrs).
Who is affected by Portugal’s 10-year citizenship rule?
Concrete examples of who is and isn’t affected:
- An American on a Portugal D8 Digital Nomad Visa: Affected. 10 years until citizenship instead of 5.
- A British retiree on a D7 visa: Affected. 10 years.
- A Canadian Golden Visa investor: Affected. 10 years (despite low physical-presence requirements).
- A Brazilian software engineer on a Tech Visa: Affected, but on the CPLP track — 7 years instead of 5.
- A French citizen working in Lisbon: Unaffected. 5 years remains the rule for EU citizens.
- A Mozambican student on a residence permit: 7 years under the CPLP track.
- An Indian national married to a Portuguese citizen for 3 years: Unaffected by the 10-year change — qualifies via marriage track after 3 years of marriage + ties to Portugal.
Are existing Portugal residents grandfathered into the 5-year rule?
Grandfathering applies to the application date, not the date you became a resident. This is a hard line. A non-EU resident who reached 4 years and 11 months of residency in October 2025 cannot claim the 5-year rule — they need another 5 years and 1 month to qualify under the new framework. By contrast, anyone who reached 5 years of residence by the cut-off and submitted a complete application before the effective date is processed under the previous law.
If you’re in the middle of your residency timeline, you have three practical options:
- Continue toward Portuguese citizenship on the 10-year clock — still leads to an EU passport, just delayed.
- Pivot to permanent residency at 5 years — secures lifelong residence + EU-area work/travel, without needing the passport.
- Relocate to a faster-citizenship country (e.g., Spain via Latin-American ties: 2 years; Italy via descent: immediate; Caribbean CBI: 3–6 months for the passport, no residency required).
When does the residency clock start under the new Portugal citizenship law?
This is the single most overlooked change in the reform. Under the previous framework, courts had held that time spent waiting for SEF/AIMA to issue the residence card could count toward the 5-year requirement (the “application date” interpretation). The 2026 reform writes the start-date as the card-issuance date directly into the statute, ending the prior ambiguity in favour of the strictest reading.
Concrete impact: a Golden Visa applicant who filed in January 2023, waited 18 months for AIMA to issue the card in July 2024, and was previously counting from January 2023 — now starts counting from July 2024 instead. Their 10-year clock ends in July 2034, not January 2033.
How long does Portugal citizenship take in 2026 for non-EU citizens?
Practical timeline broken down by step:
- Visa application to consulate decision: 2–4 months
- Arrival in Portugal to first AIMA appointment: 1–4 months
- AIMA appointment to residence-card issuance: 6–18 months (backlog-dependent)
- Card-issuance date to 10-year mark: 10 years (the clock)
- Filing citizenship application to IRN decision: 18–36 months
- Real-world total: 11.5–13 years
How long does Portugal citizenship take for CPLP citizens?
The CPLP advantage remains the largest single benefit in Portuguese nationality law. A Brazilian or Angolan citizen still reaches citizenship 3 years faster than a comparable American or British applicant. With Portugal’s 7-day-per-year physical presence rule for Golden Visa holders, this makes CPLP-track Golden Visas one of the fastest legal paths to an EU passport in 2026.
How long does Portugal citizenship take for EU citizens?
Use cases where EU citizens do pursue Portuguese citizenship: tax-residency under the IFICI regime, family unification, dual passport for children, or as a hedge against EU treaty changes affecting their original country.
What about children born in Portugal to non-Portuguese parents?
This is one of the most consequential changes for families on D7, D8, or Golden Visa permits. Under the old framework, a child born in Portugal to non-Portuguese parents could acquire citizenship through a more permissive path. The new rules align with stricter EU norms (similar to Germany and France) and prevent “birth-tourism” patterns the parliament identified.
What this means in practice: families planning to have children in Portugal during their residency period should map out exactly when each parent’s residence card was issued, when their child is expected, and whether either parent will have 5+ years of legal residence by the birth date.
Portugal D7 (Passive Income) citizenship timeline
D7 holders should plan in two phases: (1) renew residence cards on schedule (2 years initial, then 3 years, then 5 years) to maintain unbroken residence, and (2) at year 5 from card issuance, apply for permanent residency (or “long-term resident” status) so you have lifelong residence rights regardless of when citizenship is granted.
Portugal D8 (Digital Nomad) citizenship timeline
D8 holders moving frequently across borders should track physical presence carefully: missing more than 6 consecutive months or more than 8 months total within any 24-month period can interrupt the residency chain and reset the clock at renewal. Read our Greece DNV comparison for the alternative European DNV with a faster (7-year) citizenship path.
Portugal Golden Visa (ARI) citizenship timeline
Golden Visa programs since 2023 are restricted to fund investments, qualifying job-creation, donations to cultural heritage, scientific research, or capital transfer — real estate as a qualifying asset has been excluded. Under the 2026 reform, the average Golden Visa applicant should expect 11–12 years from initial investment to Portuguese passport, accounting for AIMA backlog plus 10-year residence plus 18–36 months processing.
Portugal D2 (Entrepreneur) citizenship timeline
D2 holders should especially document business continuity: a closed or dormant Portuguese company during your residency years can trigger residence-card non-renewal, breaking the clock.
What language test do I need for Portuguese citizenship?
What A2 actually means: you can understand and use familiar everyday expressions, introduce yourself, ask simple questions about personal details, and interact in simple ways with patient native speakers. It is meaningfully below conversational fluency. Typical preparation time for adults with no prior exposure: 3–6 months of consistent study.
CIPLE A2 exam fee in 2026: approximately €72–€90. Format: written + oral. Pass mark: 55%.
What is Portugal’s new integration test for citizenship?
Topics commonly tested: Portugal’s geographic regions and major cities, the Constitution and government structure, key historical events (Salazar regime, 1974 Carnation Revolution, EU accession), CPLP membership, fundamental rights and duties, basic legal system. Format: multiple choice, conducted at the IRN or designated examination centre. Pass mark and exact format are being finalised in implementing regulations.
What documents do I need for Portugal citizenship?
Full document checklist:
- Original birth certificate — issued within 6 months, apostilled in country of origin, translated into Portuguese by a sworn translator
- Valid passport + copy of all stamped pages
- Residence-card history — copies of every residence card issued during your 10-year (or 7-year CPLP) period
- Criminal record from your country of citizenship — apostilled, translated, less than 90 days old
- Criminal record from any country you lived in for more than 12 months in the past 10 years — apostilled, translated
- Portuguese criminal record (Registo Criminal) — obtained directly by IRN, but useful to verify
- CIPLE A2 language certificate from a CAPLE-accredited centre
- Integration test certificate (new under 2026 reform)
- Proof of residence and integration — utility bills, rental contracts, tax filings (IRS), social security history, NHR/IFICI status if applicable
- Signed application form (Form CIDPT-1 or successor)
- Application fee payment receipt — €250 per adult applicant
Family applicants (spouses, minor children) submit parallel files with additional documents: marriage certificate (apostilled, translated), birth certificates of minor children, proof of family ties.
How much does Portugal citizenship cost in 2026?
| Item | Cost (per adult applicant) |
|---|---|
| IRN application fee | €250 |
| CIPLE A2 language exam | €72 – €90 |
| Integration test fee | €30 – €60 (provisional) |
| Apostille (birth certificate, criminal records) | €100 – €200 |
| Sworn translations into Portuguese | €200 – €500 |
| Criminal record procurement | €25 – €100 |
| Notarised declarations and copies | €50 – €150 |
| Estimated government & document total | €600 – €1,200 |
| Lawyer-assisted application (optional) | + €1,500 – €3,500 |
How do I apply for Portuguese citizenship? Step-by-step
- Maintain unbroken residency for 10 years (or 7 years for CPLP). Renew residence cards on schedule. Avoid absences of more than 6 consecutive months without notifying AIMA. The clock starts from your first card’s issuance date.
- Pass the CIPLE A2 Portuguese exam. Register at a CAPLE-accredited centre, study 3–6 months, sit the written + oral test. Pass mark 55%. Keep your certificate (no expiry).
- Pass the mandatory integration test. Schedule via IRN. Study history, civics, geography, constitutional structure. Multiple-choice format.
- Gather and apostille documents. Order birth certificate from your country of birth, criminal records from country of citizenship + any country you lived in for 12+ months in the last decade. Apostille and translate everything into Portuguese.
- File the application. Submit at any IRN office in Portugal, at a Portuguese consulate abroad, or online via the IRN portal. Pay the €250 fee. Receive a case number.
- Wait 18–36 months for the decision. IRN may request additional documents or interviews. Respond promptly to avoid file closure.
- Collect your citizenship certificate (Assento de Nascimento) and apply for your Portuguese passport. Once approved, you are registered as a Portuguese citizen at the central civil registry. Apply for the Cartão de Cidadão and EU passport at any Portuguese citizen-services counter.
Should you still pursue Portugal — or switch routes?
The 10-year rule changed the math for many of our clients. A 30-minute strategy call gets you a personalised view: stay on Portugal, pivot to Spain (5-year via Iberoamerican track if applicable), switch to Italy (descent or marriage track), or use Caribbean CBI for a passport in 3–6 months. We map your fastest legitimate path.
Can I get permanent residency in Portugal at 5 years?
Many clients facing the new 10-year clock pivot to permanent residency at year 5 as a “safe checkpoint” — they secure long-term residence rights, continue accruing time toward eventual citizenship, and can keep the citizenship clock ticking in the background. The two are not mutually exclusive.
Portugal vs Spain citizenship — which is faster in 2026?
| Factor | Portugal | Spain |
|---|---|---|
| Non-EU general residency | 10 years | 10 years |
| CPLP / Iberoamerican track | 7 years (CPLP) | 2 years (Latin America, Sephardic Jews, Andorra, Philippines, Equatorial Guinea) |
| Dual citizenship allowed | Yes | Only for Iberoamerican applicants; others must renounce |
| Physical presence (low-presence visa) | 7 days/yr (Golden Visa) | 183 days/yr after first card |
| Language | A2 Portuguese | A2 Spanish (DELE) |
| Integration test | Mandatory (new) | CCSE mandatory |
| Govt fees | ~€250 | ~€100 |
Portugal vs Italy citizenship — which is better in 2026?
Portugal vs Greece citizenship — which is faster?
See our Greece Digital Nomad Visa guide for the full Greece pathway breakdown.
What if I already submitted my Portugal citizenship application before the reform?
“Complete application” means all required documents at filing, not promises to deliver them later. IRN treats files missing core documents as ineligible for the grandfathering window. If your application was returned for missing documents and you re-filed after the cut-off, you may be subject to the new rule. Verify your specific case with a lawyer.
Is the Sephardic Jewish heritage route still open?
The Sephardic route had granted citizenship to descendants of Sephardic Jews expelled from the Iberian Peninsula in 1492, with no residency requirement and a relatively light documentation burden. It was the fastest non-investment path to a Portuguese passport before 2026 — and the most-criticised, leading to its closure under the reform package.
Can I get Portuguese citizenship through marriage?
“Proven ties to Portugal” can include: shared residence in Portugal, child(ren) with Portuguese citizenship, knowledge of Portuguese language and culture, and integration into Portuguese society. The marriage track does not require physical residence in Portugal — many couples qualify while living abroad.
Can I get Portuguese citizenship through descent (Jure Sanguinis)?
This is the fastest legitimate path to a Portuguese passport for anyone with Portuguese ancestry. Processing typically takes 12–24 months from filing complete documents. Required: birth certificates linking you to a Portuguese ancestor in a continuous chain, with each link properly registered with the Portuguese civil registry. Brazilian, Mozambican, Angolan, and Goan families often qualify and don’t realise it.
What does Portuguese citizenship give me?
Practical benefits most clients value:
- Live and work in any EU country without a visa — including Germany, France, Netherlands, Spain, Italy, Ireland
- Henley Passport Index ranking: Portugal sits in the top 5 strongest passports globally
- Schengen Area free movement
- EU-citizen tax planning options across member states
- CPLP-area special access: Brazil, Angola, Mozambique, Cabo Verde, etc.
- Pass citizenship to children automatically by descent
- Consular protection from any EU embassy worldwide
- Right to vote in Portuguese and European Parliament elections
Common reasons Portugal citizenship applications are rejected
- Broken residency chain. Long absences, late renewals, or periods of irregular status interrupt the residency clock and reset it.
- Tax non-compliance. Failing to file Portuguese IRS returns when tax-resident, or having outstanding tax debt, is a frequent disqualifier.
- Criminal record. Convictions for crimes with sentences exceeding 3 years (under Portuguese equivalent) trigger automatic rejection. Even minor convictions can require additional review.
- Language or integration test failure. Both CIPLE A2 and integration test certificates are mandatory under the reform — no certificate, no application.
- Incomplete or improperly apostilled documents. Birth certificates not apostilled in the country of origin, translations done outside the sworn-translator network, or expired criminal records all cause rejections.
How to maximise your chances of approval
Tactical advice we give every FindWithAnkit client:
- Map your residency timeline today. Note your first card’s issuance date. Project the exact date you’ll reach 10 years (or 7 for CPLP). Plan applications accordingly.
- File Portuguese tax returns every year — even years with zero Portuguese income, if you are tax-resident.
- Renew residence cards before expiry, not after. Gaps trigger residency-chain breaks.
- Start CIPLE A2 prep early. Don’t wait for year 9 — give yourself 6+ months of consistent study before the test.
- Keep a digital folder of every utility bill, lease, IRS filing, social security receipt, and travel boarding pass from your residency period. IRN can request any of these to verify residency.
Portugal Citizenship FAQ
Did Portugal really change citizenship from 5 to 10 years?
Yes. The Portuguese parliament approved a nationality law reform in October 2025 that raised the residency requirement for citizenship from 5 to 10 years for non-EU general applicants. The change took effect on the law’s promulgation date and applies to applications filed after that date.
Is Portugal still worth it for citizenship in 2026?
Yes — for CPLP nationals (7-year track), for descent-based applicants (immediate), for spouses of Portuguese citizens (3 years), and for anyone willing to commit to 10 years for a top-5 global passport. For non-CPLP applicants seeking the fastest EU passport, Greece (7 years), Spain (2 years if Latin American), and Italy by descent are now stronger plays.
Does the Portugal D7 visa still lead to citizenship?
Yes, the D7 still leads to citizenship — just on the 10-year clock instead of 5. The D7 itself remains a strong long-stay residence route, especially for retirees and passive-income holders. The change is to the citizenship timeline at the end, not to the D7 visa rules.
Does the Portugal Golden Visa still lead to citizenship?
Yes — but the timeline is now 10 years of legal residence instead of 5. Golden Visa physical-presence requirements (7 days per year) and the qualifying investment categories (funds, job-creation, donation, capital transfer, scientific research) are unchanged.
Can I get a Portuguese passport in 5 years still?
Only if you are an EU citizen, a CPLP-track applicant who reached eligibility before October 2025 with a complete file, or someone qualifying through marriage (3 years) or descent (immediate). For everyone else, the timeline is now 10 years (7 for CPLP) under the 2026 reform.
How long does Portugal citizenship processing actually take after I file?
The Instituto dos Registos e Notariado (IRN) currently takes 18–36 months from filing a complete application to a decision. The 2026 reform did not change processing times; it changed the residency requirement before you can file.
Can I apply for Portuguese citizenship from outside Portugal?
Yes. You can apply at any Portuguese consulate worldwide or online via the IRN portal once you have the required documents. You don’t need to be physically in Portugal at the time of application, but you must have completed the required residency in Portugal beforehand.
Does Portugal accept dual or multiple citizenship?
Yes. Portugal fully accepts dual and multiple citizenship — you don’t have to renounce your original passport when naturalising. This makes Portuguese citizenship additive rather than a trade.
Will the 10-year rule be reversed?
Unlikely in the near term. The 2025 reform passed with cross-party support and reflects a structural policy direction across Western Europe (Germany 8, France 5 discretionary, Italy 10, Spain 10). Future tweaks to grandfathering, the CPLP track, or the integration test are more likely than a return to a 5-year general rule.
Can I become a Portuguese citizen if I’m not religious or don’t have a Portuguese ancestor?
Yes. The vast majority of Portuguese citizenship applicants qualify through residence alone — no religion, ancestry, or special status required. The standard route is 10 years of legal residence + A2 language + integration test + clean record + €250 fee.
Does time spent on a tourist visa or Schengen short-stay count toward the 10 years?
No. Only time spent on a valid residence permit (with a valid Título de Residência) counts. Tourist visas, Schengen short-stays, and irregular periods do not count toward the residency clock.
What happens to children whose parents naturalise as Portuguese?
Minor children of newly-naturalised Portuguese parents typically acquire Portuguese citizenship automatically by extension. The child’s application is filed alongside or shortly after the parent’s, with proof of parental relationship.
Can I appeal a Portugal citizenship rejection?
Yes. You have 30 days from the decision notice to file an administrative appeal at IRN. If administrative appeal is denied, you can pursue a judicial review at the administrative court (Tribunal Administrativo). Most successful appeals involve technical document issues rather than substantive eligibility.
Who should you trust on Portugal citizenship law?
This guide is written by Ankit Agarwal, founder of FindWithAnkit, a global mobility and citizenship-by-investment advisory specialising in second-residency, second-passport, and digital-nomad-visa strategies for entrepreneurs, founders, and remote-first professionals. We track Portuguese nationality law changes in real time and update this guide every 60 days as implementing regulations are published. For specific legal advice on your case, we partner with licensed Portuguese immigration lawyers based in Lisbon and Porto.
Ready to plan your Portugal citizenship — or switch routes?
Book a 30-minute strategy call. We’ll review your current status (visa type, residence-card issuance date, family situation, tax position), confirm whether grandfathering helps you, and map your fastest legitimate path to an EU passport. The $100 fee is fully credited toward our $5,000–$7,000 done-for-you service if you engage us.