Portugal airports get 367 extra border police to cut summer queues
Portugal's PSP police has deployed 367 officers to the airports of Lisbon, Porto, Faro, Funchal and the Azores to speed up border control during the summer peak.
Anyone passing through a Portuguese airport in the coming weeks will notice a lot of new uniforms. Since Monday, 367 officers from the PSP’s National Unit for Foreigners and Borders (UNEF) have been reinforcing air border posts, on a two-week operational placement that follows classroom training completed on Friday. The goal is simple: get passengers through border control faster and shrink the queues at the height of summer.
How many police officers is each airport getting?
Lisbon takes the largest share with 170 officers, followed by Porto (78), Faro (69), Funchal (29) and the Azores (21). The split mirrors each airport’s summer traffic — and the size of the queues each has been racking up.
Why are the queues at Portuguese airports so long?
The short answer: the new European border control system, which began operating in phases from October 2025 in Portugal and the other Schengen countries. Biometric registration of everyone entering and leaving made each crossing slower, and waiting times got worse — at Lisbon airport some passengers waited several hours. With summer multiplying flights, the PSP brought in reinforcements to stop peak season turning arrivals into an endurance test.
For travellers from outside the European Union, the border changes don’t stop here: 2026 also brings ETIAS, Europe’s new travel authorisation, another step in the digitalisation of Schengen entries. Until then, the recipe for July and August is the usual one — arrive early, keep your documents handy, and count on a few more officers keeping the line moving.
Image: Sharon Hahn Darlin / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 2.0)