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Does Portugal extradite its citizens? The short answer is that the Portuguese Constitution contains a broad prohibition against extraditing nationals, yet several carefully defined exceptions, for terrorism, serious organised crime, and surrender under the European Arrest Warrant (EAW), mean the protection is far from absolute. Act 65/2003, Portugal’s implementing law for the EAW European Arrest Warrant Framework Decision, sets out the circumstances in which a Portuguese national may be surrendered to another EU Member State, subject to mandatory and optional refusal grounds that defence counsel must know how to invoke. Eurojust’s May 2026 summary report on the speciality rule, together with recent Tribunal Constitucional jurisprudence, have further refined the practical landscape for anyone facing cross-border criminal proceedings in Portugal.
Key takeaways:
The starting point is Article 33 of the Constitution of the Portuguese Republic, which states that Portuguese citizens shall not be extradited from national territory. This constitutional guarantee, reproduced in the Fundamental Rights Agency’s law-reference database, has been a cornerstone of Portuguese public law for decades. However, the same article contains important qualifications that have expanded over successive constitutional revisions.
Article 33(3) of the Constitution provides that the extradition of Portuguese nationals from national territory shall only be permitted when an international convention has established reciprocal arrangements, and in cases of terrorism or international organised crime. Even then, the Constitution imposes an additional safeguard: the legal system of the requesting state must guarantee a fair trial. This means that Portugal does not operate a blanket refusal; instead, it applies a conditional prohibition whose exceptions are narrowly drawn.
Crucially, the Portuguese Constitution distinguishes between traditional extradition to third states and surrender between EU Member States under the EAW. Article 33(5) was introduced specifically to accommodate the EAW scheme, providing that surrender may occur under conditions defined by law, that law being Act 65/2003. For defence practitioners, the distinction matters: constitutional challenges that succeed against a third-state extradition request may not apply with the same force to an intra-EU surrender, because the EAW operates on a principle of mutual recognition rather than classic extradition law. Portugal’s Council of Europe treaty declarations confirm that the country maintains its constitutional reservations in the traditional extradition context while operating a separate surrender regime for the EAW.
Understanding whether Portugal will extradite its citizens requires navigating three interlocking legal layers: the Constitution, the domestic implementing statute, and the EU instruments that created the surrender mechanism. Each layer grants distinct rights and imposes distinct obligations, and defence strategies must address all three.
Law no. 65/2003 of 23 August transposed the EU Council Framework Decision 2002/584/JHA into Portuguese domestic law. The Act governs the execution and issuance of European Arrest Warrants by Portuguese judicial authorities. It sets out the list of offences for which surrender proceeds without verification of European Arrest Warrant double criminality, the standard catalogue of 32 offence categories (including terrorism, trafficking, and fraud) punishable by a maximum of at least three years’ imprisonment in the issuing state. For offences outside this list, Portuguese courts must verify that the conduct also constitutes a criminal offence under Portuguese law before authorising surrender.
The Act further regulates the consent of the requested person, time limits for judicial decisions, rights during detention pending surrender, and the grounds on which the executing court must, or may, refuse to execute the warrant. These provisions are the primary battlefield for defence lawyers challenging an EAW in Portugal.
The European Commission’s EAW overview confirms that the European Arrest Warrant replaced traditional extradition procedures between EU Member States with a system of judicial surrender based on mutual recognition. The standard European Arrest Warrant form, which the issuing judicial authority must complete, requires specification of the offence, the applicable penalty, and whether the offence falls within the listed categories. Incomplete or defective forms are a valid procedural ground for challenging surrender. The FRA’s Portugal country brief on EAW proceedings details the specific procedural rights afforded to arrested persons in Portugal, including the right to a lawyer and interpreter from the moment of arrest.
| Instrument | Key provision on nationals | Practical effect for defence in Portugal |
|---|---|---|
| Portuguese Constitution (Article 33) | Nationals shall not be extradited except for terrorism/organised crime (reciprocal convention) or EAW surrender (conditions defined by law) | Defence may invoke the constitutional prohibition where the request is a traditional extradition (non-EU) and does not fall within the terrorism/organised crime exception |
| Act 65/2003 | Surrender of nationals permitted for listed offences without double-criminality check; refusal grounds apply (mandatory and optional) | Defence must assess whether offence is listed, invoke applicable refusal grounds, and challenge proportionality and speciality compliance |
| EU Framework Decision 2002/584/JHA | Nationality alone is not a ground for refusal; executing state may condition surrender on the person being returned to serve sentence at home | Defence may request that any custodial sentence be served in Portugal as a condition of surrender, a key tactical option for Portuguese nationals |
The constitutional exception for terrorism and international organised crime is the most significant inroad into the nationality bar. Article 33(3) of the Constitution explicitly permits extradition of Portuguese nationals where an international convention establishes reciprocal extradition arrangements and the offence falls within the categories of terrorism or serious organised crime. The provision was introduced to bring Portugal into line with its commitments under multilateral counter-terrorism conventions and EU cooperation instruments.
In practice, this exception means that a Portuguese citizen accused of terrorism-related offences by a third state (outside the EU) may be extradited, provided three conditions are satisfied: the existence of a reciprocal treaty, classification of the offence as terrorism or organised crime, and a fair-trial guarantee in the requesting state. The US-Portugal extradition arrangements, documented in the bilateral treaty materials, illustrate how this exception operates in the transatlantic context.
For defence counsel, the terrorism exception is narrower than it first appears. The requesting state bears the burden of demonstrating that the offence genuinely falls within the terrorism or organised crime category, broad characterisations are insufficient. Industry observers expect that Portuguese courts will continue to scrutinise whether the specific conduct alleged meets the threshold, rather than accepting the requesting state’s classification at face value. Defence teams should prepare evidence challenging the legal characterisation of the offence and, where applicable, argue that the fair-trial guarantee is not met by reference to conditions in the requesting state.
Act 65/2003 contains both mandatory and optional grounds for refusing to execute a European Arrest Warrant. These refusal grounds are the most powerful tools available to defence counsel, and Portuguese courts, particularly the Tribunal Constitucional, have developed significant case law on their interpretation. Understanding how these grounds interact with constitutional protections is essential for anyone asking whether Portugal will extradite its citizens through the EAW mechanism.
| Refusal ground | Act 65/2003 or Constitutional provision | Practical defence implication |
|---|---|---|
| Ne bis in idem (double jeopardy) | Mandatory refusal under Act 65/2003 | Obtain certified evidence that the person has already been finally judged for the same acts in Portugal or another Member State |
| Age of criminal responsibility | Mandatory refusal under Act 65/2003 | If the requested person was below the age of criminal responsibility in Portugal at the time of the offence, surrender must be refused |
| Amnesty in Portugal | Mandatory refusal under Act 65/2003 | Check whether Portuguese amnesty legislation covers the offence, if so, surrender cannot proceed |
| Statute of limitations | Optional refusal under Act 65/2003 | Argue that prosecution would be time-barred under Portuguese law for offences within Portuguese jurisdiction |
| Nationality / sentence execution at home | Optional refusal; Constitution Article 33(5) | Request that surrender be conditioned on the person being returned to Portugal to serve any custodial sentence |
| Human-rights concerns | Constitutional principles; EU Charter of Fundamental Rights | Present evidence of systemic detention conditions or fair-trial deficiencies in the issuing state, invoke ECHR Articles 3 and 6 |
| Speciality rule breach | Act 65/2003 implementing Article 27 of Framework Decision | Challenge any attempt to prosecute for offences not covered by the original warrant after surrender |
The Tribunal Constitucional has played a decisive role in shaping how these refusal grounds operate. In Ruling No. 540/2022, the Constitutional Court examined the intersection between Act 65/2003’s consent provisions and the constitutional protections afforded to Portuguese nationals, clarifying the scope of judicial oversight required before surrender can proceed. The ruling reinforced that the executing court must conduct an independent assessment rather than simply deferring to the issuing state’s characterisation of the offence.
Summary 384/2005, an earlier landmark decision, addressed the constitutionality of Act 65/2003 itself, confirming that the EAW regime was compatible with the Constitution provided that the mandatory safeguards, including the right to contest surrender, access to counsel, and judicial review, were rigorously applied. Together, these rulings establish that Portuguese courts must act as genuine gatekeepers, not rubber stamps, when processing EAW requests involving nationals. Defence teams should cite both decisions when arguing that the executing court has an obligation to independently verify the conditions for surrender.
The speciality rule in the European Arrest Warrant is a fundamental protection: once surrendered, a person may only be prosecuted, sentenced, or deprived of liberty for the offence specified in the warrant that led to surrender. This principle, codified in Article 27 of the Framework Decision 2002/584/JHA, prevents the issuing state from using surrender as a vehicle to pursue unrelated charges.
Eurojust’s May 2026 summary report on the speciality rule under the European Arrest Warrant provided an updated cross-border analysis of how Member States apply this protection. The report highlighted persistent inconsistencies in how issuing states request consent to extend prosecution beyond the original warrant and recommended that executing states, including Portugal, take a proactive role in monitoring compliance. Early indications suggest this guidance will strengthen the hand of defence counsel seeking to enforce speciality protections after surrender.
Portugal did not renounce the speciality rule when implementing the Framework Decision through Act 65/2003. This means that any extension of prosecution beyond the offences specified in the original warrant requires either the formal consent of the Portuguese executing authority or a new EAW. For defence lawyers, the tactical advice is clear: before and after surrender, ensure that the European Arrest Warrant form precisely describes the offences and verify that no additional charges have been brought without proper consent. If the speciality rule has been breached post-surrender, Portuguese authorities retain standing to raise the violation through judicial cooperation channels.
Even where a valid EAW exists and no mandatory refusal ground applies, proportionality remains a legitimate defence argument. The question is whether issuing an EAW, with its severe consequences of arrest, detention, and cross-border transfer, is proportionate to the seriousness of the offence and the penalty sought. Academic commentary, including studies published by the CCBE, has consistently criticised the use of EAWs for minor offences, and the likely practical effect of this ongoing debate is increased judicial scrutiny at the executing stage.
Portuguese courts have discretion to assess proportionality, particularly for offences carrying short sentences or where alternative measures (such as a European Investigation Order) could achieve the same purpose. Defence counsel should present evidence on the nature of the offence, the expected penalty, and whether less intrusive cooperation mechanisms were available to the issuing state.
| Stage | Timeframe | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Arrest of requested person | Immediately upon identification / SIS II alert | Person must be informed of EAW and rights (counsel, interpreter) at arrest |
| First judicial hearing | Within 48 hours of arrest | Court assesses identity, detention, and consent to surrender |
| Decision on surrender (consenting person) | Within 10 days of consent | Applies where the person consents to surrender and waives speciality |
| Decision on surrender (non-consenting person) | Within 60 days of arrest | May be extended by 30 days in exceptional circumstances |
| Physical surrender after final decision | Within 10 days of the final decision | If surrender does not occur within this window, the person must be released |
The 10-day surrender window following a final decision is a critical pressure point. Defence counsel must lodge any appeals before the final decision crystallises, once the 10-day clock starts, options narrow dramatically. Where urgent interim measures are needed to prevent surrender pending appeal, counsel should apply to the competent court immediately and cite both Act 65/2003 procedural guarantees and constitutional rights to effective judicial protection.
For suspects and defence lawyers confronting a European Arrest Warrant in Portugal, the following checklist outlines the immediate practical steps. Time is critical: most deadlines under Act 65/2003 are measured in days, not weeks.
Individuals who suspect an EAW may have been issued against them can request information through the SIS II (Schengen Information System) national bureau. In Portugal, the SIRENE Bureau, operated within the security forces, handles requests related to SIS alerts. Defence counsel may also contact the Procuradoria-Geral da República (Attorney General’s Office) to verify whether an EAW has been received. Acting early, before arrest, allows for strategic preparation that is impossible once the time-pressured surrender procedure begins.
The question of whether Portugal extradites its citizens does not have a binary answer. The constitutional presumption against extradition of nationals is strong, but it yields to defined exceptions, terrorism and organised crime in the traditional extradition context, and the full EAW regime for intra-EU surrender under Act 65/2003. Defence counsel who understand the refusal grounds, the speciality rule, proportionality arguments, and the tight procedural timelines can mount effective challenges. With the Eurojust May 2026 speciality-rule summary adding fresh guidance and the Tribunal Constitucional continuing to insist on rigorous judicial oversight, the landscape demands both legal precision and tactical urgency.
If you or your client face an extradition request or European Arrest Warrant in Portugal, early specialist advice is critical. Find a Portugal criminal-law expert through the Global Law Experts directory to ensure the strongest possible defence from the moment of arrest.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Vânia Costa Ramos at Carlos Pinto de Abreu e Associados, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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