CRUE certificate: how EU citizens register as residents in Portugal
The CRUE is mandatory for EU citizens staying in Portugal beyond three months. You request it at your local câmara municipal, it costs about €15 and is valid for five years.
The CRUE — Certificado de Registo de Cidadão da União Europeia — is the document that formalises residency in Portugal for nationals of an EU country, the European Economic Area or Switzerland who stay longer than three months. You request it at the câmara municipal (city hall) of the area where you live, it costs around €15 and it’s valid for five years. It’s simple — but it has deadlines, and that’s where most people trip up.
What is the CRUE and who needs it?
Unlike non-EU citizens, who go through visas and AIMA, Europeans don’t need permission to live in Portugal — the right already exists; it just has to be registered. That’s what the CRUE does: it turns your stay into a formal record of residence. It’s required of all EU, EEA (Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway) and Swiss citizens who remain in Portugal beyond 90 days — to work, study, run a business or simply live. In practice you’ll be asked for it constantly: for a work contract, a NIF with a Portuguese address, SNS health-service registration, car registration or a driving-licence exchange.
When and where do you apply for the CRUE?
The clock starts at the border: once your first 90 days in Portugal have passed, you have 30 days to register. The application is made in person at the câmara municipal of the area where you live (in some municipalities, at citizen-service desks). Check your local council’s website for whether you need an appointment — in the big cities, increasingly you do.
How much does the CRUE cost and what documents do you need?
The fee is around €15, varying slightly by municipality. Bring your ID (passport or national identity card), proof of address and a sworn declaration that you work (employed or self-employed) or that you have sufficient means of subsistence for yourself and your family — students add proof of enrolment and declare sufficient resources. The certificate is issued on paper, on the spot or within a few days depending on the service.
What happens after five years?
Anyone who has lived legally in Portugal for five consecutive years can apply for the permanent residence certificate — that one handled by AIMA. It’s the open-ended version of the right of residence, and a common stepping stone for those who later consider applying for Portuguese nationality.
FAQ
Can I stay in Portugal without a CRUE?
For the first three months, yes, with no formalities at all. Beyond that, failing to register is an administrative offence punishable by a fine — and it complicates everything that requires proof of residence.
Does the CRUE cover my non-EU family?
Not directly: spouses and family members from third countries apply for a residence card as family members of an EU citizen, handled by AIMA, presenting the European family member’s CRUE.
Do I need to renew the CRUE?
The certificate is valid for five years (or your planned period of residence, if shorter). At the end, you either renew the registration or, once you’ve completed five years of legal residence, move up to the permanent residence certificate.
See also: our guide to Portugal’s visa routes and how to register with the SNS health service. Official information at AIMA and Lisbon City Hall.
Image: Diego Delso / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0)