New Nationality Law: 10 years for most, 7 for CPLP countries
The 2026 law extends the residence periods to apply for Portuguese citizenship. Here's who's affected and when the clock starts.
If the plan was to live in Portugal a few years and apply for the passport, it’s time to update the mental maths. The new Nationality Law, promulgated in 2026, extended the residence periods needed to apply for citizenship, and the change is big.
Broadly, the residence time required for most non-EU and non-EEA nationals rises to ten years. For EU citizens and citizens of Portuguese-speaking countries, the CPLP, the period sits at seven years. So the historic advantage for the lusophone world stayed, but the clock now ticks more slowly for almost everyone.
What it changes in practice
For anyone who has lived here a long time, the impact may be small. For recent arrivals, or those planning to come, it’s several extra years of waiting before applying. It’s worth confirming exactly when legal residence time starts counting and gathering the right paperwork from the outset, so you don’t lose months over a missing document.
The change also shifted investors. Many viewed residence as the antechamber to the passport; now, with longer timelines, they’re doing the sums differently.
The best advice is the usual one: confirm everything at the official source, AIMA, before making life decisions. The rules changed, and they could change again.
See also: Still waiting for your first permit? What AIMA says about timelines.
Imagem: Wikimedia Commons