Portugal's national exam results finally land on Friday — and the minister is asking teachers for help
Portugal's 2026 national exam results come out on 17 July, three days late. After a failed digital marking platform and exams corrected three times over, the education minister is pleading with markers to stay available.
After weeks of repeated corrections, stretched deadlines and a digital platform that did everything except work, students finally have a date to hold on to: Portugal’s national exam results come out this Friday, 17 July.
When do Portugal’s 2026 national exam results come out?
Results will be posted on Friday 17 July — three days after the original date of 14 July. The whole calendar slid: markers who were supposed to hand in corrected papers by the 10th got an extension to the 14th, and the second exam phase was pushed back four days. Students needing grades for the first round of university admissions don’t lose their application window, but they did gain a week of suspense nobody asked for.
Why were the exam results delayed?
This was the debut year for digital marking of paper exams, and the debut went badly. Between platform failures and problems with QR codes on the papers, some teachers ended up correcting the same exam three times — education minister Fernando Alexandre admitted as much, along with an apology to the markers. This week he said 99% of exams were corrected, but the final stretch has been brutal: the Fenprof teachers’ union describes markers working through the night, and the National Exams Jury has struggled to find available markers for subjects like Portuguese and maths.
On the eve of results day, the minister made his clearest plea yet, asking teachers to keep their markers available to the end. The clean-up will cost money too — the government had already admitted the exams will need another 500,000 euros to close the books.
What are the political consequences?
They’re unfolding today: the exams mess is the main course of the State of the Nation debate, with opposition parties demanding inquiry committees and urgent hearings. The official exam calendar lives on the National Exams Jury site — worth bookmarking, because the second phase is coming, with a promise that this time the technology behaves.
On Friday, at least, the suspense ends. For the students, that is. For the minister, it may just be starting.
Illustrative · Photo: Gera Cejas / Pexels