Portugal student visa: new rules require applying at your home consulate from September
From September 2026, Portugal's student visa must be issued at the consulate in your home country before you travel. What changes, who is affected and how to apply.
The short answer: from September 2026, anyone who wants to study in Portugal must apply for their student visa at the Portuguese consulate in their home country, before travelling. The old route — arriving as a tourist, enrolling in a course and sorting out residency from inside Portugal — is closed.
What changes with Portugal’s student visa?
The change, approved by parliament as part of the broader tightening of immigration law, ends in-country status conversion. Until now, thousands of students — above all Brazilians, Portugal’s largest foreign community — would land as tourists and use an enrolment letter to apply for residency without leaving the country. Under the new rules, the residence visa for study must be issued upfront by the consulate covering the applicant’s place of residence.
When do the new rules take effect?
In September 2026, timed to the start of the 2026/2027 academic year. Arrive without the right visa and you risk being turned away at the border — and you can no longer regularise your situation afterwards without first leaving the country. If you’re planning to study in Portugal in 2027, your timeline now starts months before the flight.
How do you apply for a student visa now?
You apply at the Portuguese consulate (or authorised application centre) in your home country, with proof of enrolment or acceptance at an educational institution, means of subsistence, accommodation and insurance. In Brazil, since April 17, 2026, applications can no longer be posted: you must appear in person at VFS Global centres or at the consulates. The official requirements are on the MNE visa portal and on gov.pt.
The practical advice is simple: start the visa process months ahead and don’t book flights until the visa is in your passport. See also: our full guide to visas for moving to Portugal and, for EU citizens, how to get the CRUE certificate.
Image: Dicklyon / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)