Portugal is now the EU's 9th most populous country: INE revision counts 11.4 million residents
Portugal has risen to ninth most populous country in the EU, with 11,424,031 residents at the end of 2025, after the INE revised its estimates and fully counted 1.6 million foreign residents.
Portugal has 11,424,031 inhabitants and is now the ninth most populous country in the European Union, climbing one place in a year. The figure comes from the resident-population estimates for 31 December 2025, published by the INE statistics office with a deep revision of the series back to 2021 — one that finally counts in full the roughly 1.6 million foreigners living in the country.
How many people live in Portugal in 2026?
More than anyone thought. The new estimates point to 11,424,031 residents at the close of 2025, and the 2024 figure itself was revised upwards from 10,749,635 to 11,387,222 — nearly 640,000 people who were already here but missing from the count. The full tables are on the INE website.
What explains Portugal’s population growth?
Immigration — almost the entire answer. Between 2021 and 2025 the resident population grew by 824,914 people, with especially strong migration flows in 2022, 2023 and 2024, years when the population rose by 330,000, 275,000 and 183,000 respectively. Without that movement, ageing and a negative natural balance would be shrinking the country; with it, Portugal has climbed the European table and refreshed its workforce.
The numbers give context to a debate that is far from merely statistical: from public services to housing, and on to the new nationality-law rules, the country is deciding how to make room for those arriving. The 11.4 million already live here — policy is still catching up to meet them.
Image: Alexander Svensson / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 2.0)