Banking jobs in Portugal hit highest level since BES collapse: 782 new posts in a year
Employment in Portuguese banking reached its highest level since the 2014 BES collapse, with 782 net jobs added in a year — even as branches keep closing.
After a decade of shrinking, Portuguese banking is hiring again in earnest: over the past year the sector added 782 jobs in net terms, lifting employment to its highest level since the collapse of BES in 2014. It is a remarkable turn of the cycle for an industry that spent years as a byword for restructuring and redundancy packages.
Why are Portuguese banks hiring?
Not for the counters — for the technology. Banks are beefing up digital, data and cybersecurity teams, and responding to the growth of the banking business itself, fattened by the high interest rates of recent years. The proof is in the contrast: while employment rose, the branch network kept thinning — 126 agencies closed over the past year, leaving 3,339 at the end of 2025, according to Bank of Portugal data. Fewer doors open, more people behind screens.
How does Portugal compare with Europe?
Surprisingly well. In 2025 Portugal was the fifth euro-zone country where banking employment grew the most — only Germany, Spain, Poland and Finland created more posts. And that in a year when the sector shed more than 13,000 jobs across the euro zone as a whole, largely down to French banks, which alone eliminated close to 20,000 positions.
For the labour market it is another sign of the unusual moment Portugal’s economy is enjoying — unemployment below the European average and stronger-than-expected growth at the start of the year. If you are hunting for a qualified tech job, an unlikely heavyweight recruiter has entered the chat: the bank on the corner — or what is left of it. See also which sectors pay best in Portugal.
By Beatriz Mota
Image: Jules Verne Times Two / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)