Portugal is growing faster than the eurozone in 2026 (and the market likes it)
Forecasts point to Portugal outpacing the European average this year, with Lisbon's stock index up and the euro holding firm.
There is some good news hiding under July’s heat: Portugal is on track to end 2026 growing faster than the eurozone average. The exact figure depends on who is counting, but the more optimistic scenario has gross domestic product rising around 2.2% this year — ahead of the roughly 1.2% expected for the single-currency bloc as a whole.
What is driving Portugal’s growth?
There is no magic here. Behind the numbers sits a concrete mix: faster spending of the NextGeneration EU recovery funds, a rebound in wages that gives households a little breathing room, and a labour market that keeps adding jobs. Immigration, so often treated only as a political football, shows up here on the side of the ledger that props up growth and demographics.
It is not all sunshine. Inflation is stubbornly refusing to fall as quickly as anyone would like, pushed along by energy prices, and medium-term growth is expected to cool towards 1.5%. In other words: 2026’s momentum is welcome, but it is not something to take for granted in the years that follow.
Summer mode on the exchange
In the markets, the start of July has been calm and mildly upbeat. Lisbon’s stock exchange traded in the green, with the main index up around half a percentage point, and the euro held firm near 1.14 dollars. If your savings sit in funds or shares, it is one of those uneventful days — and lately, that alone counts as a relief.
If you want to see how the cost of money feeds into all this, it is worth revisiting what we wrote on the central bank’s stance in rates and Euribor and on the role of the recovery plan.
See also: the official figures are at Banco de Portugal.
Illustrative · Photo: Jakub Zerdzicki / Pexels