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The Portugal D8 Digital Nomad Visa 2026 remains the cheapest mainstream Schengen route for African remote workers in 2026. Cheaper than Spain’s nomad visa, simpler than Germany’s freelancer permit, and warmer than Estonia’s. The income floor is set at four times the Portuguese minimum wage — about €3,480 a month in 2026 — and the process is nearly identical from any African consulate that processes Portuguese long-stay visas.
What the D8 actually buys you
The D8 is a four-month entry visa that converts to a two-year residence permit on arrival, renewable for three more years. After five years you can apply for permanent residence and Portuguese citizenship after the same five-year mark, subject to A2 Portuguese and a clean record. The residence permit gives you Schengen freedom of movement for short stays in all 29 Schengen countries.
The Portugal D8 Digital Nomad Visa 2026 income floor and why it changes
Portugal recalibrates the D8 income requirement every January when the national minimum wage updates. In 2026 it sits at €3,480 per month, or €41,760 per year. That figure must come from genuine remote work for clients or employers outside Portugal. Three to twelve months of bank statements are the standard proof — AIMA prefers twelve. A Tanzanian remote product designer earning $4,500 USD per month on freelance contracts comfortably clears the threshold; a Kenyan content marketer earning $2,800 does not.
Reference: AIMA — Agência para a Integração, Migrações e Asilo. AIMA replaced SEF in 2023 and is the agency that issues your residence card after the visa.
Documents AIMA wants to see for the Portugal D8 Digital Nomad Visa 2026
- Passport valid for at least six months past visa expiry.
- Three passport-size photos (35x45mm).
- Twelve months of personal bank statements showing inbound remote-work income above the threshold.
- Employment contract or freelance contracts dated within the past year.
- Portuguese NIF (tax number) — obtained via a fiscal representative if you don’t hold one yet.
- Proof of accommodation in Portugal for the first year — rental contract or letter of intent.
- Private health insurance covering Portugal until you enrol in the public system.
- Police clearance certificate from each country of residence in the past five years.
Want help packaging documents the way the consulate expects? https://linktr.ee/travelexpore
Step-by-step from Lagos, Nairobi or Accra
- Step 1. Open your Portuguese NIF through a fiscal representative service — expect to pay around €100. This unlocks the Portuguese bank account and rental options.
- Step 2. Open a Portuguese bank account remotely (Bordr, Atlantico Europa or millennium services accept African residents).
- Step 3. Secure your accommodation contract — a one-year lease in Porto or Lisbon is the cleanest evidence.
- Step 4. Compile your twelve months of bank statements and employment / contract evidence.
- Step 5. Book the consular appointment at the Portuguese consulate nearest you — VFS Global handles most African intake.
- Step 6. Pay the visa fee (€90), attend the biometric appointment, submit documents.
- Step 7. Receive the four-month D visa, fly to Portugal, attend the AIMA appointment within 90 days, receive your two-year residence card.
The same flow works from Nigeria, Kenya, Ghana, Cameroon, Senegal, Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, South Africa and Egypt. For a Spain-versus-Portugal comparison, see our Spain Digital Nomad Visa 2026 guide.
Frequently asked questions about the Portugal D8 Digital Nomad Visa 2026
Can my employer be African?
Yes — provided you can demonstrate the employment is genuinely remote and pays into your personal account. AIMA does not restrict the geography of the employer.
Do I pay Portuguese tax under the D8?
You become a Portuguese tax resident after 183 days. Pay attention to the Non-Habitual Resident regime successor (NHR 2.0) which can offer favourable tax treatment for ten years — speak to a Portuguese tax adviser.
Can I bring my family?
Yes. Spouse and minor children can join under the family reunion procedure once you hold the residence card.
How long does the D8 take end to end?
From NIF to residence card on the ground in Portugal, plan for four to seven months.
Before you start drafting
- The Portugal D8 Digital Nomad Visa 2026 income floor is €3,480 per month or €41,760 per year.
- The visa converts to a two-year residence card and qualifies for Portuguese citizenship after five years.
- Documents centre on twelve months of bank statements, an NIF, accommodation evidence and health insurance.
- The flow works identically from Lagos, Nairobi, Accra, Dar es Salaam, Kigali, Cape Town and Cairo.
- Total cost of the route including fiscal representative, fees and translations sits below €1,000 for a single applicant.
Get expert help with your Portugal D8 application
Travel Explore reviews applications case-by-case before submission. Start here: https://linktr.ee/travelexpore
Related reads on Travel Explore
- Spain Digital Nomad Visa 2026 for African Remote Workers
- Netherlands Orientation Year Visa 2026 for African Graduates
- EU Blue Card 2026 Compared
Share this story
- Portugal’s D8 is still the cheapest Schengen route for African remote workers — if you earn €3,480 a month.
- Get your Portuguese NIF before anything else. It’s the unlock for the rest of the file.
- D8 to citizenship in five years, family included. The math still works in 2026.

