EXPATTOOLS EST. 2017
DOSSIER LIS · LISBON · PORTUGAL · REVIEWED JUN 2026
RELOCATION DOSSIER · LIS

Lisbon

Three hundred days of sun and a startup scene that ate the city's affordability. Still magnetic — just no longer the bargain the 2019 blog posts promised.

PT · Portugal 38.7°N 9.1°W
8.5 OUT OF 10 LIS · ENTRY FILED 2026
Reviewed by the ExpatTools team · CNB-registered financial advisers, Prague · Last reviewed 9 June 2026 · Portugal country file

Snapshot

FORM LIS-01
Comfortable monthly$1,950/mo
Field score8.5/10
Time zoneWET (UTC+0)
Best forDigital nomads · Startup founders
Typical daytime highs
Monthly costs, single person (USD)
Rent 1BR
$1,300
Food
$270
Transport
$43
All-in
$1,950

Cost of living

FORM LIS-02
Budget
  • Housing (1BR apartment)$910
  • Food & Dining$162
  • Transportation$43
  • Utilities + Internet$117
  • Entertainment & Social$98
  • Health Insurance$98
  • Total$1,428
Comfortable
  • Housing (1BR apartment)$1,300
  • Food & Dining$270
  • Transportation$65
  • Utilities + Internet$156
  • Entertainment & Social$234
  • Health Insurance$156
  • Total$2,181
Premium
  • Housing (1BR apartment)$2,080
  • Food & Dining$540
  • Transportation$172
  • Utilities + Internet$195
  • Entertainment & Social$488
  • Health Insurance$234
  • Total$3,709

Figures are planning estimates for one person, reviewed June 2026. Run your own numbers in the cost calculator.

Banking

FORM LIS-03

ActivoBank (owned by Millennium BCP) offers free current accounts with English-language online banking — the most popular choice for new expats. Millennium BCP is the largest private bank with extensive branch network. Novo Banco and CGD (state bank) also serve expats. NIF (Número de Identificação Fiscal — tax number) is required for everything, including opening a bank account. Apply at your local Finanças office or through a fiscal representative. Account opening typically requires: NIF, passport, proof of address, and proof of income. Processing takes 1-5 business days.

Partner

Moving money across borders? Wise converts at the mid-market rate with fees of roughly 0.3–1% — the tool we set our own clients up with before anything else.

Open Wise

Taxes

FORM LIS-04
Read first General information, not tax advice. Rates and rules change; confirm with a qualified adviser for your situation.

Errors in tax filing can result in significant penalties. Progressive income tax rates range from 14.5% to 48% on Portuguese-source income. The former NHR (Non-Habitual Resident) regime, which offered 20% flat tax on Portuguese-source income for qualifying professions, ended for new applicants in 2024 but is grandfathered for existing holders until their 10-year period expires. A new incentive regime offers reduced rates for qualifying professionals and researchers relocating to Portugal. Capital gains on property are taxed at 50% of the gain included in taxable income. Freelancers can use a simplified regime (Regime Simplificado) with coefficient-based deductions. Double taxation treaties exist with most major countries.

Full expat tax guide →

Visas & residency

FORM LIS-05

Important: Visa regulations change frequently. Always verify current requirements with the official embassy or consulate before making plans. This guide provides general information as of 2026. Portugal offers several visa pathways for expats. The D7 Passive Income Visa requires proof of passive income (minimum ~€760/month for a single applicant) from pensions, investments, rental income, or similar sources. The Digital Nomad Visa (launched 2022) targets remote workers earning at least 4x the Portuguese minimum wage (~€3,040/month) from foreign employers or clients. The Golden Visa program grants residency through investment (property, fund investment, or job creation) — minimum thresholds have changed several times. EU/EEA citizens have full freedom of movement. D7 and DN visas both lead to permanent residency after 5 years and Portuguese citizenship after 5 years (one of Europe's fastest paths to EU citizenship).

Compare visa options → · Nomad visa guide →

Healthcare

FORM LIS-06

Understanding the healthcare system is crucial for any expat — it affects your daily peace of mind, your budget, and your visa eligibility. Here's a comprehensive guide based on real advisory experience. Portugal has a universal public healthcare system (SNS - Serviço Nacional de Saúde) available to all legal residents. Quality is generally good in Lisbon and Porto, with major hospitals including Hospital de Santa Maria and São João Hospital. Waiting times for specialists in the public system can be lengthy (months for non-urgent cases). Many expats opt for private health insurance (€50-200/month depending on age and coverage) for faster access to English-speaking doctors and shorter wait times. Private hospitals include CUF, Lusíadas, and Hospital da Luz. Prescription medications are subsidized through the SNS.

Partner

Not yet covered locally? SafetyWing insures remote workers in 180+ countries from about $45/month — a sensible bridge until you enter a national system.

Check SafetyWing

The case for Lisbon

FORM LIS-07
  • 300+ days of sunshine per year — one of Europe's sunniest capitals
  • Thriving startup and tech ecosystem — Web Summit, hundreds of startups
  • Excellent and affordable food — fresh seafood, pastéis de nata, incredible wine
  • High English proficiency among younger population — 70%+ speak some English

Compare Lisbon with another city