Portuguese citizenship: what changes beyond the waiting years
Beyond the jump from 5 to 10 years, the new law requires A2 Portuguese, a civic-knowledge test and a declaration of commitment to the rule of law.
The talk about the new nationality law has stuck to one number: the period rose from 5 to 10 years for most applicants (7 for EU and CPLP nationals). But there is more fine print than that, and it is worth knowing before you do the maths on your life.
The new requirements
Waiting out the clock is not enough. The revised law, promulgated in May, also asks for a clean criminal record, Portuguese at A2 level, a test of the country’s civic and historical knowledge, a formal declaration of commitment to the principles of the democratic rule of law, and proof of genuine ties to the national community.
In plain terms: the state wants to see that whoever asks for the passport speaks enough to get by, knows the basics of how the country works and has a life built here. A2 is no professor’s exam — it is the level of someone who manages day to day — but it is best not to leave it to the last minute.
What to do now
If you are counting the years, start working on your Portuguese and keep everything that proves your link to Portugal: address, work, your children’s school, contracts. And follow the deadlines at AIMA, where the paperwork is filed.
See also: the AIMA strike and what to do if it hit you and the rise from 5 to 10 years.
Image: Wikimedia Commons