Portugal's economy finds momentum at the start of 2026
GDP grew 2.3% in the first quarter despite storms and pricey energy — and the OECD sees more resilience than feared.
The year started on a bumpy road for Portugal’s economy — storms in January and February, an energy-price jump in spring — and yet the numbers surprised on the upside. GDP grew 2.3% year-on-year in the first quarter, above the modest pace of 2025.
What is driving it
The engine is at home. Domestic demand, and investment in particular, was the big contributor, a sign that companies are more confident about spending and expanding. Much of that lift comes from RRP funds, which this year are expected to approach 2.3% of GDP in spending — quite a push.
Not everything points the right way. Imports grew faster than exports, and net external demand weighed on the result. Inflation is forecast around 3% in 2026 and unemployment holds at 6.3%, with wages rising slightly above prices.
The OECD picture
The OECD reads this as an economy more robust than feared, with public debt still falling — projected at 86.7% of GDP this year. It is not a boom, but it is stability on a jittery continent.
See also: US inflation and the return of rate talk and gold’s run of monthly falls. The regulator’s bulletins are at Banco de Portugal.
Image: Wikimedia Commons