New company creation in Portugal falls 4.1% — but construction is booming
Portugal saw 27,831 new companies in the first half of 2026, down 4.1% year on year. Construction grew 11% and is now the second-biggest sector for new businesses for the first time.
Portugal created 27,831 new companies in the first half of 2026 — 4.1% fewer than in the same period last year. At first glance that is bad news; up close, the picture has more nuance: fewer companies are closing than before, and one sector is clearly rowing against the tide.
Which sector is creating the most companies in Portugal?
Construction. The sector grew 11% in new company registrations over the half-year and reached, for the first time, second place among all economic activities. It is not hard to guess why: with the housing crisis at the top of the political agenda and tax incentives for construction and renovation in force, there is work to be done — and people are setting up companies to do it.
The other side of the ledger also improved: 5,690 companies closed by the end of June, an 18% drop compared with 2025. Fewer births, yes, but considerably fewer corporate funerals too — which fits a start of the year in which Portugal’s economy found momentum in the first quarter, with companies more profitable and financing cheaper.
Should the 4.1% drop worry anyone?
It depends where you look. A dip in company creation usually reflects caution — interest rates still normalising, uncertain external demand, elections and a trade war on the radar. But the net balance (births minus closures) remains clearly positive, and composition matters: more construction firms means a response to the Portuguese economy’s biggest bottleneck, the shortage of homes. If the country needed a sign that the market has read the priorities, this is it. Official business-demography data is available on the Informa D&B portal.
By Beatriz Mota
Image: Whiteghost.ink / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)