Family reunification: what changes under the new rules
The new Foreigners Law generally requires two years of legal residence before applying for family reunification, with exceptions for minor children.
For many immigrants in Portugal, the dream is not only to come, it is to bring the family. And that is precisely where the new Foreigners Law tightened up. It is worth understanding what changes, without scaremongering and without pretending nothing is different.
The main rule is new: most residents will now have to complete two years of legal residence in Portugal before they can apply for family reunification. It is a requirement that did not exist in the same form and that forces more advance planning.
The exceptions that matter
Not everything is so closed off. The two-year period does not apply to minor children or incapacitated dependants of someone legally in the country. And there is a shorter window, of 15 months, for couples who can prove they lived together for at least 18 months before the main applicant moved here.
There are other substantial changes too. CPLP citizens will now need a residence visa before applying for the permit, so it is no longer possible to handle everything on national territory with a tourist visa. Integration measures are also foreseen, such as learning the language, with proof of proficiency certificates.
The advice is the usual one, but more important than ever: check your specific situation with an official source before making decisions, because the details change from case to case and the deadlines have dates.
See also: The new Nationality Law and its deadlines. Official information at AIMA.
Illustrative · Photo: Borys Zaitsev / Pexels