Foreign degree recognition in Portugal: the three types and where to apply
Foreign degree recognition in Portugal works through three routes — automatic, level and specific — via the DGES portal or universities. Guide with steps, documents and FAQ.
If you earned your degree abroad and want it to count in Portugal, the path is called recognition of foreign degrees and diplomas — and it runs through one of three routes: automatic recognition, level recognition or specific recognition. All three carry exactly the same legal value; what changes is what they are for, how long they take and who processes them. Picking the right route first time saves months.
What is automatic recognition of foreign degrees?
It is the fast lane, available only for certain degrees from certain countries, officially listed. If your diploma is on the list — many bachelor’s and master’s degrees from the European Union, Brazil and other recognised systems — the process is almost a rubber stamp: the correspondence to the Portuguese degree is confirmed, with no curriculum evaluation. You can check whether your case qualifies using the simulator on the DGES portal before spending a cent.
What is the difference between level and specific recognition?
Level recognition assigns your diploma the level of a Portuguese degree (bachelor, master or doctorate) without comparing course by course — it works for public competitions, job applications and career progressions where proving the degree is enough. Specific recognition is the demanding route: a Portuguese higher education institution evaluates your study plan in detail and matches it to one of its own concrete programmes, and may require complementary exams. It is the usual path when you want to continue studying or when your profession requires a specific degree.
Where do you apply and how much does it cost?
Automatic and level recognition are requested online through the DGES recognition portal, or directly at a higher education institution; specific recognition is always requested at the chosen institution. Costs vary: the DGES fee is fixed, while university fees are set by each institution — specific recognition is typically the most expensive, because it involves full curriculum evaluation. Gather your diploma and transcript early, with certified translation when they are not in Portuguese, English, French or Spanish, plus the Hague apostille if your country of origin requires it. The official steps are described on the gov.pt portal.
What about regulated professions?
Mind the trap that catches half the world: to practise medicine, nursing, engineering, law, architecture and other regulated professions, academic recognition is not enough — you also need registration with the respective professional order, which runs its own processes and exams. The recognised diploma is the entry ticket, not the full pass.
Frequently asked questions
How long does degree recognition take?
Automatic recognition is normally settled in days or a few weeks; level and specific recognition depend on the institution and the time of year, ranging from weeks to several months. Avoid September, when academic services drown.
Do I need recognition to work in Portugal?
In the private sector, many employers do not require it — but public competitions, career progressions and regulated professions do. If you are coming to study in Portugal on a scholarship or on a student visa for postgraduate study, you will also need your previous degree recognised for the application.
Does recognition convert my grades?
Level and specific recognition can assign a final classification on the Portuguese scale; automatic recognition assigns it by correspondence rule. If your average matters for a competition, confirm the conversion before choosing your route.
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