More than a million foreigners now pay into Social Security
The number of foreign contributors in Portugal has passed one million — a snapshot of how immigration sustains the system.
Behind the ever-heated debate on immigration sits a figure that tends to be left out of the noisier arguments: more than one million foreign contributors currently pay into Portugal’s Social Security.
It is not a technical detail. It is the concrete picture of people who work, pay taxes and prop up a system that — with the Portuguese population ageing and having ever fewer children — needs new people entering the labour market. Professionals, retirees, entrepreneurs and investors together have become an essential part of the country’s books.
What it says about the future
The most useful reading dismantles a myth: the idea that immigrants are mainly a cost. The data shows the opposite — a very significant slice actively contributes to the pensions and services everyone depends on. Without that inflow of contributors, the imbalance between those paying in and those drawing out would be even harder to manage.
For anyone arriving or thinking of moving to Portugal, it is also a sign of integration into the system: having a Social Security number and contributing is the first step to accessing rights, from healthcare to a pension.
See also: the state of renewals at AIMA. Official information on registration and contributions at seg-social.pt.
Illustrative · Photo: Jakub Zerdzicki / Pexels