AIMA in 2026: complete application or it won't even start — and the end of automatic extensions
Two changes reshape life for anyone handling residency in Portugal: only complete applications are accepted, and automatic permit extensions are gone.
If you’re handling (or about to handle) your residency in Portugal, there are two rules you really need to keep in mind in 2026. These aren’t bureaucratic footnotes — they can decide whether your process moves forward or falls over.
1. Incomplete applications no longer go through
AIMA now accepts only complete applications. Missing a single legally required document? The application isn’t even admitted for review. The old “I’ll hand in what I have and complete it later” logic is gone. Today, either everything is there at submission, or it bounces.
In practice, this means preparing the paperwork well ahead: proof of income, address, insurance, certificates — all checked item by item. It’s worth building a checklist and reviewing it twice before you submit.
2. Goodbye, automatic extensions
The other big change: Portugal has ended automatic renewal of expired residence permits. You can no longer count on that extension covering the backlog. The responsibility is now yours — you must start the renewal on time, without waiting on the system’s goodwill.
The practical advice
Put your permit’s expiry date in the calendar and start the renewal months in advance. Keep digital copies of everything. And if your case is complex (family, changing visa type), get legal help before submitting — it’s cheaper than seeing an application rejected over one missing page.
The rules have tightened, but they’re predictable. Those who get organised get through.
Illustrative · Photo: www.kaboompics.com / Pexels