Tag Archives: Portugal Nationality Law 2026

Portugal Just Doubled the Wait for Citizenship — Read This

If a Portuguese passport was part of your five-year plan, that plan just changed. The Portugal citizenship 10 year rule is now law: in May 2026 the President promulgated a reform that doubles the standard naturalisation wait from five years to ten. Anyone building a life in Lisbon, Porto or the Algarve — remote workers, retirees, founders and investors alike — needs to understand what shifted, who is shielded, and why the clock you start now matters more than ever.

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The reform in one minute

Portugal’s parliament approved the revised Nationality Law on 1 April 2026 by 152 votes to 64, and President António José Seguro promulgated it on 3 May 2026. The headline change is simple: most foreign residents now need ten years of legal residence before they can apply for citizenship, up from five. Crucially, the reform touches naturalisation only — the five-year route to permanent residence is untouched, so your right to keep living, working and travelling in Portugal does not change. Until the text is published in the Diário da República and enters into force, the old five-year regime still applies, which is exactly why timing your application has become a live issue rather than a someday one.

Who still qualifies sooner

The law keeps a meaningful fast lane. Citizens of European Union countries and of Portuguese-speaking nations — Brazil, Angola, Mozambique, Cape Verde, Guinea-Bissau, São Tomé and Príncipe, and Timor-Leste — face a seven-year wait rather than ten. That CPLP carve-out is the single biggest reason your starting nationality now shapes your strategy.

Consider a Brazilian founder who relocated her fintech to Lisbon in 2024 on a D2 entrepreneur visa. Under the old rules she was counting down to a 2029 citizenship application. Under the reform she is on the seven-year track, so her realistic window moves to 2031 — still years ahead of a non-CPLP neighbour who now waits until 2034. Knowing which bucket you fall into is the difference between planning a passport and guessing at one.

Mapping your own route to an EU passport? Start with the resources at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

How to protect your timeline

Three things matter now. First, lock in your residence start date — your countdown runs from when your residence permit is issued, so chase any delayed renewals and keep clean records. Second, treat language early: the A2 Portuguese requirement has not gone away, and waiting until year nine to study is a classic, avoidable stumble. Third, if you are weighing Portugal against another European base, factor the longer horizon into the decision rather than assuming the old five-year story you read in 2023. The country is still one of Europe’s most welcoming entries; it simply asks for a longer commitment before the passport.

Worth remembering

  • Standard naturalisation now requires ten years of legal residence.
  • EU and Portuguese-speaking nationals keep a seven-year route.
  • Permanent residence still arrives at five years — only citizenship moved.
  • The old regime applies until the law formally enters into force, so dates matter.

Quick answers

Does the change affect my permanent residency? No. The five-year permanent residence pathway is unchanged; only the naturalisation timeline was extended.

Do Golden Visa holders get singled out? No. This is a system-wide naturalisation reform that applies to every legal residence status, not a Golden-Visa-specific rule.

I am from a Portuguese-speaking country — what is my wait? Seven years of legal residence, the same shorter track granted to EU citizens.

Has the language test changed? The A2-level Portuguese requirement remains; start preparing early so it never becomes the bottleneck.

Related reads

  • LinkedIn: Portugal just doubled its citizenship wait to 10 years. Here’s who still qualifies at 5 or 7.
  • Twitter/X: Portugal’s 5-year passport era is over. New law = 10 years (7 for EU/CPLP). What it means 👇
  • Facebook: Planning a Portuguese passport? The rules changed in May 2026 — read before you count the years.

Plan your Portugal move with eyes open

A longer road to citizenship is not a closed door — it’s a reason to start cleanly and early. Get the visa, residence and language tools you need in one place at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore

Sources

  • Diário da República / Assembleia da República — Nationality Law reform, promulgated 3 May 2026 (T0 official)
  • Portugalist — “Portuguese Citizenship Now Takes 10 Years” analysis, 2026 (T1 specialist)
  • Outbound Investment Group — President signs revised Nationality Law, 2026 (T1 specialist)

Portugal Doubled the Wait for a Passport — But Lusophone Africa Got a Gift

In May 2026 the President of Portugal signed into law amendments to the Nationality Code that quietly redraw the citizenship map for African residents. The headline number is that most foreign nationals must now show 10 years of legal residency before applying for Portuguese citizenship, up from the previous six. But a parallel provision keeps the door wide open for Lusophone Africa — citizens of CPLP states (Cape Verde, Angola, Mozambique, Guinea-Bissau, São Tomé and Príncipe and Timor-Leste, plus Brazil) qualify after 7 years. For thousands of Cape Verdean, Angolan and Mozambican families already on D7, D8 or work permits in Portugal, this is the most consequential nationality reform in a decade.

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What the May 2026 amendments actually changed

The May 2026 amendments to Portugal’s Nationality Code did three things. First, they extended the standard residency clock from 6 to 10 years for the majority of foreign residents. Second, they preserved (and arguably strengthened) a 7-year fast-track for CPLP and EU citizens. Third, they tightened the language and integration evidence required at the citizenship application stage. The amendments also repealed the so-called tourist-to-resident legalisation route, meaning that residence visas must now be applied for from a Portuguese consulate in the applicant’s country of residence — no more arriving on a tourist visa and switching.

For African candidates this is a structurally split decision. Lusophone Africans get a softer landing than almost any other non-EU nationality. Non-Lusophone Africans — Nigerians, Ghanaians, Kenyans — now face a citizenship horizon that is closer to Germany or Ireland than to the old “Schengen passport in 6 years” pitch.

The CPLP 7-year route — who qualifies

CPLP (Comunidade dos Países de Língua Portuguesa) member states include Angola, Brazil, Cabo Verde, Guinea-Bissau, Mozambique, São Tomé and Príncipe, and Timor-Leste. A national of any of these countries who has accumulated seven years of legal residence in Portugal — under any permit type, including D7, D8, study, work or family reunion — can apply for Portuguese citizenship under the CPLP fast-track. The seven years must be continuous (with absences capped at 18 months over the period) and the applicant must demonstrate A2 Portuguese language proficiency, which is a low bar for Lusophone Africans by default.

Consider Iara, a Cabo Verdean teacher who moved to Lisbon on a D7 visa in 2020 with her two children. By the time the amendment takes full effect, she will have accumulated six and a half years of legal residence. Under the CPLP rule she applies for Portuguese citizenship on her seventh anniversary — likely Q4 2027. Compare with Tariro, a Zimbabwean software developer who moved to Porto on a D8 in 2022. As a non-CPLP national she must now wait until 2032 to file for citizenship under the new rules.

Need a second pair of eyes on your application? Drop us a note via https://linktr.ee/travelexpore

If you are not CPLP — the 10-year rule

Non-CPLP African residents must now demonstrate 10 years of legal residence in Portugal, A2 Portuguese, clean criminal record from both Portugal and country of origin, and meaningful evidence of community ties. The clock starts on the date your first residence card is issued, not the date you arrived. Three months without status anywhere in that decade restarts the count for many applicants — keep your residence card renewals current.

If you are mid-way through a D7 or D8 with three or four years already in Portugal, the trade-off is whether to push for permanent residency (still 5 years) and treat that as the practical destination, or to wait the full 10 for citizenship. Permanent residency under the new framework gives near-citizen rights inside Portugal but does not grant a passport.

Documents Lusophone Africans should start gathering today

Begin assembling these documents now — many take 4-6 months to obtain from African issuing authorities. Your apostilled birth certificate from your country of origin. A current criminal record certificate from your country of origin (Angolan PIRC, Cape Verdean Casier Judiciaire, Mozambican Registo Criminal) — these certificates are typically valid for 90 days, so time the request to coincide with your filing window. Proof of continuous legal residence (every residence card you have held). Proof of Portuguese tax residency (NIF + IRS filings). A1 / A2 CIPLE language certificate from Camões Institute.

Transition rules: who is grandfathered

The transition rules matter as much as the new rules themselves. Applicants who had already filed for citizenship before the amendment’s effective date are assessed under the prior 6-year/5-year rules. Applicants who had completed six years of residence before the effective date but had not yet filed have a 12-month window to file under the prior rules. After that window closes, the new 10-year (or 7-year CPLP) clock applies. If you are within touching distance, the question is not whether to wait — it is how fast you can file.

If your timeline is tight, escalate before you apply — https://linktr.ee/travelexpore

Pocket guide

  • 10 years standard residency for citizenship; 7 years for CPLP nationals.
  • CPLP includes Angola, Cabo Verde, Guinea-Bissau, Mozambique, São Tomé and Príncipe.
  • A2 Portuguese is the bar — easy for Lusophone Africans, manageable for others.
  • Residence visas must now be applied for from consulates abroad — no tourist-to-resident switch.
  • Anyone six years in before the effective date has a 12-month window to file under old rules.

Frequently asked questions

Q: Do my years on a D7 visa count toward the seven-year CPLP clock?
Yes. Any legal residence under any visa type (excluding short-stay tourist or visit visas) counts.

Q: What if I am a dual national — Angolan and Portuguese-descended?
Portuguese-descent citizenship is unaffected by the amendments. The 10/7-year clock applies only to acquisition by residency.

Q: I left Portugal for nine months to care for a parent. Does that break my residency?
No. Absences under 18 months in total over the qualifying period are tolerated.

Q: Does Portuguese citizenship automatically grant me EU citizenship?
Yes — and the right to live and work in any EU/EFTA country.

Q: Can my Nigerian wife co-apply with me if I am Cape Verdean?
She qualifies under the standard 10-year rule (or 5 years if married to you for at least three years as a Portuguese citizen).

Related reads

Share this story

LinkedIn: Portugal just rewrote its citizenship rules. CPLP nationals (Angola, Cabo Verde, Mozambique, Guinea-Bissau, São Tomé) keep a 7-year route. Everyone else now waits 10.
Twitter: Portugal Nationality Law May 2026: 10 years standard, 7 years CPLP. Lusophone Africa wins. Plan early.
Facebook: Cabo Verdeans, Angolans, Mozambicans living in Portugal — the new law confirms your seven-year route to Portuguese (and EU) citizenship.

Get personalised help today

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Sources

  • Idealista (idealista.pt/news) — Portugal D8 Digital Nomad Visa 2026 complete guide (T1, 2026-03-31)
  • Garant in — Portugal Golden Visa 2026 Current Changes and New Rules (T2, 2026)
  • Citizen Remote — Portugal Digital Nomad Visa D8 2026 (T2, 2026)

Further reading