Portuguese nationality: the wait rises from 5 to 10 years
The revised law extends the residency time required to apply for citizenship. We explain who is affected and what changes in practice.
One of the changes felt most keenly by the foreign community in Portugal is in the nationality law. With the revision approved in 2026, the general residency period required to apply for Portuguese citizenship rises from 5 to 10 years for most applicants.
There is, however, an important distinction. For citizens of the European Union and of the Portuguese-speaking countries, the CPLP, the period sits at 7 years. The door does not close, but it now opens later for many people who had planned around the old rules.
What this means in practice
For those who have lived in Portugal for years and expected to apply soon, the change forces a rethink. The waiting time stretches, and that has concrete effects: from the right to vote to the freedom to move and work on a Portuguese passport.
The debate is heated. Supporters argue that citizenship should not be granted in a hurry and that longer periods strengthen the bond with the country. Critics say it penalises people who work, pay taxes and have been part of the social fabric for a long time.
A note for those who came through the investment route: golden visa holders can still reach permanent residence after five years. Permanent residence and nationality are not the same thing, and it is worth not confusing the two — the longer period is for the passport, not for the right to keep living here.
There are still many doubts about transitional rules and how years already completed will be counted. Anyone in the middle of a process should confirm their specific situation with the authorities and, if needed, specialised legal support, rather than assuming the worst or the best.
See also: Portugal tightens its immigration law and AIMA’s backlog. Official information at AIMA.
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