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Portugal Just Made Citizenship Harder to Get — But Permanent Residency Is Still Within Reach

Portugal Just Made Citizenship Harder to Get — But Permanent Residency Is Still Within Reach

Somto NwanoluebySomto Nwanolue
6 hours ago
in Government
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For years, the promise was simple: live in Portugal for five years, and you could apply for citizenship. A passport. European Union rights. A new life.

However, that promise has gotten harder to reach.

On May 3, 2026, Portugal’s President promulgated a revised Nationality Law, formally signing the new framework into effect. The most publicized change is a big one: the residency requirement to apply for Portuguese citizenship has moved from five years to ten.

The conversation around Portugal’s nationality law has been noticeably loud over the past few weeks. And for good reason.

But here is what the headlines are not telling you. While citizenship just got farther away, Permanent Residency has not moved at all.

Table of Contents

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  • The Change Everyone Is Talking About
  • What Has Not Changed
  • What Permanent Residency Actually Gives You
  • Every Visa Route Leads to the Same Place
  • Where the Golden Visa Stands Apart
  • Why This Matters After the New Law
  • The Bottom Line

Portugal Just Made Citizenship Harder to Get — But Permanent Residency Is Still Within Reach
The Change Everyone Is Talking About

Most of the coverage has focused on a single number — the move from a five-year to a ten-year residency requirement before applicants can apply for Portuguese citizenship. That is a meaningful change, and it has understandably created a lot of questions.

For international residents who were counting on a passport after half a decade, the timeline just doubled. A five-year plan became a ten-year plan overnight. The reaction from prospective applicants has ranged from frustration to panic.

But the part of the framework that did not move has received much less attention.

What Has Not Changed

Under Portuguese law, the path to Permanent Residency remains unchanged following the recent reform. After five years of legal residency, applicants from any qualifying visa route can apply for Permanent Resident status, provided the standard conditions are met. That includes a basic level of Portuguese language, a clean criminal record, and evidence of stable ties to the country.

In other words, the five-year milestone that many people had associated with citizenship still exists. It now leads to Permanent Residency rather than directly to a passport.

The question for expats and investors is no longer “how do I get citizenship in five years?” Is Permanent Residency enough?

What Permanent Residency Actually Gives You

Permanent Residency in Portugal is a long-term, renewable status that does not expire as long as the holder maintains their connection to the country. It carries with it a number of practical benefits.

Permanent Residents have the right to live in Portugal indefinitely, to work and study without further authorization, and to access public services on broadly the same basis as Portuguese citizens. It also acts as a firm legal foundation — a stable status that does not need to be renewed every two or three years, and that is not affected by changes in employment, investment activity, or business circumstances.

For families, it provides predictability. For investors, it removes the uncertainty associated with shorter-term residence permits.

What Permanent Residency does not give you is a Portuguese passport. No EU voting rights. No consular protection from other EU countries. No citizenship.

Every Visa Route Leads to the Same Place

One of the most useful things to understand about Portugal’s system is that the major visa categories all converge on the same five-year milestone. Whether someone enters the country through a D7 passive income visa, a D8 digital nomad visa, a work visa, a family reunification permit, or the Portugal Golden Visa, the underlying clock is the same.

Five years of legal residency, properly maintained, opens the door to Permanent Residency.

The route in is different. The destination is the same.

What does change between visa types is the lifestyle and presence requirements during those five years.

Where the Golden Visa Stands Apart

Most of Portugal’s visa categories are designed for people who plan to live in the country full-time. D7 and D8 holders, for example, are generally expected to spend the majority of the year in Portugal. Work and family reunification visas are linked to ongoing employment or family circumstances.

The Golden Visa is structured differently.

It was created for international investors who wanted to establish a legal foothold in Europe without needing to relocate immediately. The minimum stay requirement is an average of just seven days per year. Investors can maintain their primary residence elsewhere, run their existing business, and gradually build their connection to Portugal at a pace that suits them.

After five years, those Golden Visa holders sit alongside D7, D8, and other applicants at the same Permanent Residency milestone — having spent a fraction of the time physically in the country.

That flexibility is one of the reasons the program has continued to attract interest from families based in the United States, the United Kingdom, and other parts of the world, even as the wider European landscape has tightened.

Why This Matters After the New Law

For people whose primary motivation was always Portuguese citizenship, the move to a ten-year timeline will require a longer view. A passport is still possible. It just takes twice as long.

For a large group of international residents, however, the practical objective has always been a stable, long-term right to live in Europe. Permanent Residency provides exactly that, on the same five-year timeline as before.

Citizenship can come later, for those who decide they want it.

Reframing the goal in this way often makes the planning conversation more productive — and considerably less anxious.

The Bottom Line

Portugal’s new Nationality Law extends the residency requirement for citizenship from five years to ten. The change was promulgated on May 3, 2026. But the path to Permanent Residency remains unchanged at five years for applicants from any qualifying visa route, including the D7, D8, work visa, family reunification, and Golden Visa.

Permanent Residents have the right to live, work, and study in Portugal indefinitely. They can access public services on broadly the same basis as citizens. What they do not get is a Portuguese passport.

For investors using the Golden Visa, the minimum stay requirement is an average of just seven days per year — a fraction of what other visa holders must spend in the country.

Portugal just made citizenship harder to get. But for those whose goal is a stable, long-term right to live in Europe, Permanent Residency remains within reach — on the same five-year timeline as before.

Tags: citizenshipfederal characterForeign NewsgovernmentNewsPermanent residencyPortugal
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Somto Nwanolue

Somto Nwanolue

Somto Nwanolue is a news writer with a keen eye for spotting trending news and crafting engaging stories. Her interests includes beauty, lifestyle and fashion. Her life’s passion is to bring information to the right audience in written medium

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