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Understanding how to apply for Portuguese nationality in 2026 requires careful attention to the significant reforms that took effect on 19 May 2026. Lei Orgânica n.º 1/2026, published in the Diário da República on 18 May 2026, amends the foundational Lei n.º 37/81 (the Lei da Nacionalidade) and introduces new residence‑period thresholds, extends eligibility to great‑grandchildren of Portuguese nationals and stateless residents, and formalises a 90‑day administrative decision target. This guide walks long‑term residents, family‑link applicants, investors and immigration counsel through every stage of the process, from verifying eligibility to collecting the final certificate, with the document checklists, timelines and cost breakdowns that official government pages do not provide in one place.
Portuguese nationality can be acquired through several routes: attribution at birth (jus soli or jus sanguinis), declaration (by marriage or civil partnership, or by descent from Portuguese nationals), and naturalisation (by residence in Portugal). The May 2026 reform most directly affects the naturalisation‑by‑residence route and certain descent‑based declarations, but every applicant should understand which pathway applies to their circumstances before gathering documents.
The principal routes affected by the 2026 changes are:
If you are unsure which route applies to you, an administrative law specialist in Portugal can assess your eligibility before you invest in document preparation.
The Portuguese nationality requirements for 2026 differ meaningfully from the pre‑reform position. The table below summarises the main naturalisation eligibility scenarios under the amended Lei n.º 37/81, as published in Lei Orgânica n.º 1/2026.
| Route | Residence requirement | Key additional conditions |
|---|---|---|
| General naturalisation (non‑CPLP, non‑EU) | 10 years of legal residence | Of legal age; no serious criminal convictions; sufficient ties to the Portuguese community |
| Special naturalisation (CPLP nationals and other specified categories) | 7 years of legal residence | Of legal age; no serious criminal convictions; sufficient ties to the Portuguese community |
| Stateless persons | 4 years of legal residence | Must satisfy good‑conduct and integration requirements (paragraphs c) to h) of Article 6(1)) |
| Spouse / civil partner of Portuguese national | Married or in partnership for requisite period (generally 3 years); may also need residence | Marriage or partnership must be genuine and subsisting |
| Grandchildren / great‑grandchildren of Portuguese nationals | No fixed residence period (declaration route) | Must demonstrate effective ties to the Portuguese community; civil registry evidence of the Portuguese ancestor |
Under the general naturalisation route, the 10‑year rule requires applicants to prove ten continuous years of legal residence in Portugal at the date the application is filed. Residence must be lawful, meaning supported by a valid residence permit, registration certificate (for EU/EEA nationals) or equivalent immigration status. Periods of absence are assessed on their frequency and duration; short absences for holidays or business do not normally break continuity, but extended departures may.
All naturalisation applicants must demonstrate that they have no serious criminal convictions punishable by a prison sentence of three years or more under Portuguese law. The competent authority, the IRN (Instituto dos Registos e do Notariado), operating under the Ministério da Justiça, verifies this through official criminal record checks with the Polícia Judiciária and through consultation of the applicant’s home‑country criminal record. Evidence of effective ties to the Portuguese community may include Portuguese language proficiency, school enrolment of children, employment history, tax declarations and participation in community life.
The following numbered steps set out the standard procedure for a naturalisation application under the reformed law. Each step identifies who is responsible and the typical duration. A consolidated timeline table appears at the end of this section.
Before gathering documents, confirm which route applies to you and calculate whether you meet the residence threshold as of your intended filing date. Map every document you will need (see the required documents section below). Begin ordering foreign records, birth certificates, criminal record certificates, early, because retrieval from overseas authorities is the single largest cause of delay.
If any of your supporting documents are not in Portuguese, arrange certified translations and apostilles at this stage. Countries that are party to the Hague Apostille Convention require an apostille from the competent authority in the issuing country. Documents from non‑Hague countries require full consular legalisation, which adds time.
Assemble the complete application file. Core evidence includes your residence permit or TRC (Título de Residência), Portuguese and home‑country criminal record certificates, birth certificate, proof of habitual residence (Autoridade Tributária tax assessments, utility contracts, rental agreements) and any integration evidence (employment contracts, school records, language certificate). Ensure every document meets freshness requirements, criminal record certificates are typically valid for three months from the date of issue, so order them close to your intended filing date.
For descent‑based applications, you will also need civil registry extracts proving the family link to the Portuguese ancestor, obtainable from the Conservatória dos Registos Centrais or a local conservatória.
Applications can be submitted through the official gov.pt online service portal or in person at an IRN service counter (Conservatória). Online filing is available directly or through an authorised lawyer (advogado) or solicitador. When a lawyer files on the applicant’s behalf online, the submission must be authenticated with the lawyer’s professional digital signature, a procedural requirement that the gov.pt platform enforces automatically.
Retain the digital receipt or receipt number generated at submission. This is your application reference for all future correspondence and status checks. The filing date recorded on this receipt is the date from which residence counting is assessed.
Once filed, the application enters a two‑phase administrative review. First, the IRN (or delegated civil registry service) conducts a completeness check. If documents are missing or insufficient, the authority will issue a request for additional information. Applicants should respond promptly, delays in providing missing documents pause the decision clock.
After the file is deemed complete, the IRN initiates official verifications: criminal record checks (Polícia Judiciária and home country), civil registry confirmations, tax and social security cross‑checks, and residence verification. Under the 2026 reform, the administrative decision on the complete file is subject to a 90‑day target. This clock runs from the date the file is confirmed complete, not from the date of initial submission. In complex cases (e.g., where inter‑agency verification is delayed), the authority may extend this period, but must notify the applicant.
If the decision is favourable, the grant of nationality is registered in the civil registry. The applicant (now a Portuguese national) collects the nationality certificate from the Conservatória. With this certificate, the new citizen can apply for a Portuguese identity card (Cartão de Cidadão) and passport through the standard channels.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Eligibility check and document collection | Applicant (lawyer optional) | 1–6 weeks (depends on overseas record retrieval and translations) |
| 2. Authentication, translation and apostille | Applicant / certified translator / consulate | 1–3 weeks |
| 3. Submit application (online or at IRN counter) | Applicant or authorised lawyer / solicitador | Instant (online) or same day (counter) |
| 4. Administrative completeness check | IRN / civil registry services | 2–6 weeks (may request missing documents) |
| 5. Official verifications (criminal, civil, tax, residence) | IRN, Polícia Judiciária, Tax Authority, Immigration Service | 4–12 weeks (varies by case complexity) |
| 6. Administrative decision (90‑day statutory target) | IRN / competent authority | 90 days from complete file, may be extended in complex cases |
| 7. Post‑decision registration and passport application | Applicant / Conservatória | 2–6 weeks |
The table below lists the documents typically required for a naturalisation application. Specific requirements may vary by route (residence, marriage, descent) and by the applicant’s country of origin. All foreign‑language documents must be accompanied by a certified Portuguese translation and, where applicable, an apostille or consular legalisation.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Valid passport or national ID | Issued by home country. Provide a certified copy; translation required if not in Portuguese. |
| Residence permit / TRC / EU registration certificate | Issued by Immigration Service (formerly SEF). Must show continuous legal residence for the claimed period, with dates. |
| Criminal record certificate, home country | Issued by home‑country police or justice authority. Must be authenticated and translated. Usually valid for 3 months. |
| Criminal record certificate, Portugal | Issued by or obtained through the Polícia Judiciária / Ministry of Justice. May be requested directly by IRN during verification. |
| Birth certificate (applicant) | Original or certified copy; apostilled and translated if issued abroad. |
| Marriage certificate or civil partnership registration | Required if applying via marriage / partnership route. Certified and translated. |
| Proof of effective ties and integration | Employment contracts, Portuguese tax returns (IRS), school enrolment records, Portuguese language certificate where required. |
| Proof of habitual residence | Tax assessments from the Autoridade Tributária, utility bills, rental contracts, include dates to evidence the residence period claimed. |
| Civil registry extracts for Portuguese relatives | Required for descent‑based applications. Obtainable from Conservatória dos Registos Centrais or local conservatória. |
| Two passport‑style photographs | Meeting current IRN specifications. |
| Power of attorney / lawyer authorisation | If filing via lawyer. For online filing, the lawyer authenticates with their professional digital signature. |
| Certified translations and apostilles | Required for all foreign‑language documents. Hague Apostille Convention countries: apostille from the competent authority. Non‑Hague countries: consular legalisation. |
| Application form / digital receipt | Retain the receipt number from online filing or counter submission. |
Practitioner tip: Build your document file in two stages. First, obtain all records that have long validity periods (birth certificate, marriage certificate, residence permits). Second, order time‑sensitive documents (criminal records, tax certificates) no more than four weeks before your filing date to ensure they remain within the three‑month validity window.
Three clocks matter most in the nationality application timeline for Portugal: residence counting, document freshness and the administrative decision target.
Residence counting. Your qualifying residence period is measured backwards from the date your application is filed. You must be able to evidence the required continuous or aggregate legal residence (7 or 10 years, depending on category) as of that date. Short absences for travel do not normally break continuity, but extended periods abroad may. Start compiling date‑stamped residence evidence at least six months before you intend to file.
Document freshness. Criminal record certificates from both Portugal and the home country are typically valid for three months from the date of issue. Civil status certificates (birth, marriage) generally have longer validity but should be recent enough to reflect the current position. Order time‑sensitive documents close to your filing date and build a buffer of two to three weeks for postal delays or administrative backlogs at overseas authorities.
The 90‑day administrative decision target. Under the 2026 reform, the competent authority has a statutory target of 90 days to issue a decision once the application file is confirmed complete. This clock does not start running at initial submission, it starts when the authority confirms that all required documents have been received and verified for completeness. Requests for additional information pause the clock until the applicant responds.
| Deadline / Clock | What triggers it | Practical tip |
|---|---|---|
| Residence counting | Application filing date, must evidence required continuous legal residence | Start compiling dated proofs 6 months before filing |
| Document freshness (criminal / civil certificates) | Issuer validity (usually 3 months from issue) | Order time‑sensitive documents no more than 4 weeks before filing |
| Administrative decision target (90 days) | Date file is confirmed complete by the IRN | Track your application number; set calendar reminders at 60 and 80 days |
| Administrative appeal deadline | Notification of adverse decision | Prepare appeal grounds in advance; seek legal advice immediately on refusal |
The total cost of a Portuguese nationality application depends on the complexity of the case, the number of foreign documents requiring translation and apostille, and whether you engage a lawyer. The table below provides indicative ranges based on publicly available fee schedules. Applicants should verify exact amounts with the IRN and relevant consular authorities at the time of filing.
| Item | Indicative amount (EUR) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Official nationality application fee (IRN) | Varies, confirm with IRN | Payable at submission. Check the current IRN fee schedule at irn.mj.pt. |
| Portuguese criminal record certificate | €0–€10 | Some certificates available free online; others incur a small fee. |
| Foreign criminal record (issuance and apostille) | €20–€150 | Depends on issuing country and consular / legalisation costs. |
| Certified translation (per document) | €30–€150 | Varies by document length and language pair. |
| Apostille / consular legalisation (per document) | €20–€80 | Varies by issuing authority; Hague Convention countries generally faster and cheaper. |
| Lawyer / agent filing fee (optional) | €300–€2,500+ | Depends on case complexity and scope of service (filing only vs. full case management). |
| Passport issuance (after grant) | €65–€100 | Standard passport fee; confirm current rate with issuing authority. |
Tax note: The IRN may cross‑check tax compliance with the Autoridade Tributária during the verification phase. Applicants should ensure their Portuguese tax filings are up to date and consistent with the residence period claimed. Engaging an administrative law practitioner is particularly advisable where tax residency history is complex or where the applicant has been filing in multiple jurisdictions.
Lei Orgânica n.º 1/2026, published in the Diário da República on 18 May 2026 and in force from 19 May 2026, represents the most significant amendment to the Lei da Nacionalidade in recent years. The President of the Republic promulgated the decree on 3 May 2026. The key practical changes are:
Applicants who had already submitted a complete application before 19 May 2026 should review the transitional provisions of Lei Orgânica n. º 1/2026 carefully. Industry observers expect that applications formally filed and accepted as complete before the effective date will generally be assessed under the rules in force at the time of filing. However, applicants whose files were incomplete or who had not yet submitted at the effective date will be subject to the new thresholds. If you were approaching the five‑year mark under the old rules but had not yet filed, the likely practical effect is that you now need to satisfy the seven‑ or ten‑year threshold (depending on category) unless a specific transitional clause applies to your situation.
Legal advice on the transitional provisions is strongly recommended.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Helena Lopes Xavier at HALX Advogados, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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