Portugal's economy in 2026: growing, but inflation keeps biting
The Bank of Portugal held its growth forecast and trimmed the deficit. The good news comes with a catch called prices. We unpack the numbers.
The Bank of Portugal opened its box of forecasts, and the result is bittersweet. The economy is set to grow 1.8% this year — slightly below 2025’s 1.9%, but a long way from slamming on the brakes.
The snag is inflation. The forecast was nudged up to 3.1%, from 2.8% in March, driven mostly by pricier energy during the months of Middle East tension. In other words: the country keeps moving forward, but the shopping trolley weighs more than we’d like.
Where the good news is
In the public accounts. The deficit should land at a slim 0.2% of GDP, and public debt keeps falling — from 89.7% of GDP in 2025 to 85.7% this year, aiming below 80% by 2028. That’s the kind of housekeeping that gives a country more room to respond when harder times come.
Bottom line: we’re growing slowly, spending more sensibly, but still feeling prices in our pockets. And if oil keeps easing after this week’s deal, some of that pressure may start to lift.
Illustrative · Photo: Markus Winkler / Pexels