Golden Visa Portugal

Who it's for

The Golden Visa is typically a good fit for non-EU/EEA/Swiss nationals who want a Portugal (and EU/Schengen) residency option through a qualifying investment, without needing to relocate full-time immediately.

Specially suited to

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Investors

who want a residency pathway connected to an eligible investment route (e.g., funds), rather than employment or passive-income routes.

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International families

who want to include eligible family members under one main application and keep a unified relocation plan.

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People who need flexibility

(business owners, frequent travelers, globally mobile professionals) and prefer a residency status that can work alongside an international lifestyle.

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Those seeking long-term optionality

i.e., a structured path that may support longer-term residence and, where eligible, potential citizenship later (subject to rules and eligibility at the time).

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Clients who value "Plan B" security

diversification, and the ability to anchor part of their life in a stable EU jurisdiction.

Key Benefits

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Residence Visa Waiver

for entering Portugal and all Schengen countries

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Stay Requirements

7 days in the first year and 14 days in the subsequent 2 year periods

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Possibility of Acquiring

Portuguese citizenship by naturalization or permanent residence after 5 years

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Family Reunification

Include your spouse, children, and dependent family members.

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Access and Enrollment

to the National Health System

How the application works

A step-by-step overview of the Golden Visa application process, from choosing your investment route to receiving your residence card.

1

Select a qualifying investment route

Choose the route that best fits your goals and profile. Arts/cultural heritage: typically €250,000 (may be reduced to €200,000 for eligible low-density projects). Investment funds/venture capital funds: typically €500,000, with key conditions around fund eligibility, holding period, and the structure of the investment.

2

Prepare the main applicant's documents

Provide core documents such as a valid passport, proof of legal stay/entry where applicable, criminal record certificate(s), and evidence that the investment has been completed and remains valid.

3

Prepare family documents (if applying together)

For each family member: passport/ID, proof of relationship (e.g., marriage/birth certificates), and criminal record certificate(s) for adult dependants.

4

Submit the application and pay government fees

Complete the online process and pay the required fees for the main applicant and each family member (fees vary and can change).

5

Attend biometrics

Provide biometric data (typically fingerprints and photo) as part of identity verification.

6

Approval and residence card issuance

Once approved and formalities are completed, the residence permit card is issued.

7

Renewals (every two years)

Renew the ARI residence permit periodically by showing the investment is still maintained and the minimum stay requirements are met (AIMA references at least 7 days in the first year and 14 days in subsequent years).