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The Rectorate building of the University of Lisbon in the Cidade Universitária
Immigration 18 July 2026

Emigrant families get priority places at Portuguese universities — but the special deadline is July 27

Portugal's priority quota for emigrants, their families and Portuguese descendants in university admissions closes on July 27, before the general August 6 deadline. Who qualifies and how it works.

If your family lives outside Portugal and there’s a teenager dreaming of a Portuguese university, this year’s calendar hides a friendly trap: the priority quota for emigrants closes on July 27 — ten days before the general first-phase deadline of August 6.

What is Portugal’s priority quota for emigrants?

It’s a reserved share of places within the National Access Competition (Concurso Nacional de Acesso) for Portuguese emigrants, family members living with them, and Portuguese descendants — a way of making sure someone who grew up abroad isn’t competing on unequal footing with students who did their whole schooling in the Portuguese system. The same July 27 deadline applies to candidates asking to substitute Portuguese entrance exams with equivalent foreign ones — the typical scenario for anyone who finished secondary school in another country. The full rules, quota by quota, are on the DGES portal, and applications are entirely online.

How many places are there and when do results come out?

The 2026 first phase opens on Monday, July 20, with 56,790 places in public higher education — 34,841 at universities and 21,949 at polytechnics. Results land on August 23 and the second phase opens the very next day. We’ve covered the general process, deadlines and application tips in detail — this week’s practical news is simply the tighter clock for anyone applying from abroad.

For diaspora families the advice is short: don’t leave for July 26 what can be handled this week — between gathering documents, validating equivalences and setting up portal access, every day counts. Portugal wants the diaspora’s children back in its classrooms; it just asks that they arrive before the deadline.

By Juliana Castilho

Image: Ivendrell / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0)

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Immigration 17 July 2026

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The Berlaymont building, European Commission headquarters, in Brussels
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Immigration 16 July 2026

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European Union and Ukrainian flags flying side by side on a building
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A Loja do Cidadão citizen shop, home to AIMA service desks
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AIMA tracker: deadlines, backlog and updates

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Immigration 16 July 2026

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The Loja do Cidadão public services centre in Mafra, Portugal
Immigration 15 July 2026

Your NISS now comes automatically at AIMA, so that's one queue gone

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View over Lisbon from São Jorge Castle
Immigration 14 July 2026

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Senior couple looking out at the sea, illustrative image
Immigration 12 July 2026

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Children in a classroom
Immigration 12 July 2026

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Business owner at the counter of a small shop
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D2 visa Portugal: the 2026 guide to starting a business and moving over

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Avenida da Liberdade in Lisbon
Immigration 11 July 2026

Portugal is now the EU's 9th most populous country: INE revision counts 11.4 million residents

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