Permanent residence for EU citizens: AIMA's new portal is now open
Since 1 July 2026, EU citizens and their families can apply for a permanent residence certificate or card in Portugal through AIMA's Renewal Portal. Full guide.
If you are a citizen of another European Union country and have lived in Portugal for a few years, here is something that concerns you: since 1 July 2026, you can apply for permanent residence directly online, through AIMA’s Renewal Portal. No more booking an in-person appointment just for this step.
Who can apply for permanent residence?
As a rule, any citizen of an EU member state (and of the European Economic Area) who has lived legally in Portugal for five consecutive years is entitled to permanent residence. You do not need a fresh reason — work, study, retirement; what counts is the length of legal, continuous residence in the country. The same applies to family members, including those who are non-EU nationals and who joined the European citizen.
The law distinguishes two documents. The permanent residence certificate for EU citizens corresponds to Article 16 of the applicable rules. The permanent residence card is for family members of EU citizens, including third-country nationals, and corresponds to Article 17. This is the paperwork the new portal now handles.
How does AIMA’s new portal work?
You apply at portal-renovacoes.aima.gov.pt, logging in with the Chave Móvel Digital (digital mobile key) or your citizen card. Once inside, you choose the type of document you want, fill in the form and upload scanned supporting documents. AIMA describes the feature as part of its modernisation and digitisation drive, designed to centralise and simplify services that once meant travelling and long waits.
The same portal already handled renewals of residence permits that expired, or expire, between 1 July 2025 and 31 October 2026, as well as residence-for-investment permits (the so-called golden visas) that expired between February 2020 and October 2026. Permanent residence for EU citizens is the newest piece to join the system.
How long do you need to live in Portugal?
Five years of legal, uninterrupted residence. Short absences — holidays, work trips — do not break the count, as long as they stay within the limits set out in law. After that period, the right to permanent residence exists whether or not you keep working. It is a more stable status than temporary residence and a common step before anyone who later wants to move on to citizenship.
Do I need to redo an old application?
No. Applications made up to 30 June 2026 under the previous procedures remain valid and do not need to be changed. If you wish, you can resubmit through the new channel, but it is not required. If you have a case already under way, the sensible thing is to wait and track its status — exactly the kind of update we gather in our AIMA tracker and in our guide to this summer’s residence renewals.
For official and always up-to-date information, the starting point is the AIMA website. It is worth gathering your documents calmly before you start: proof of address, proof of five years of residence and valid ID will save you back-and-forth. Do that, and it is just a matter of following the steps in the portal — and, at last, clearing the red tape without leaving home.
Image: fulviusbsas / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0)