Working in tech in Portugal: openings, pay and the D8 visa for newcomers
Lisbon and Porto keep hiring in tech, and the D8 visa keeps Portugal at the top of the list for remote workers in Europe.
Apply / Learn moreIf you work in tech — or want to break into it — Portugal is still a place with openings and energy. Lisbon and Porto remain the big hubs, with startups hiring engineers, product managers, data analysts and sales profiles.
Where the jobs are
Startups feed most of the market. Lisbon has hundreds of open roles, many at well-funded companies (including names tied to international accelerators). Porto is heating up too, with development, test automation and business-development roles. And a good chunk already offer remote or hybrid — which widens the field for people who don’t live in the two big cities.
The D8 visa, the digital nomad magnet
For newcomers who already work remotely, the D8 visa (digital nomad) keeps Portugal near the top of European preferences: a pleasant climate, a cost of living still competitive against other capitals, and a large international community, especially in Lisbon. It’s a hard combination to beat.
How to move
Job boards like Startup Jobs, Wellfound or accelerator listings are good starting points. Keep a sharp English CV (most tech here works in English) and an up-to-date online profile. If you’re coming from abroad, sort your NIF and visa paperwork early — that’s what usually delays arrival.
The market isn’t in 2021-style euphoria, but it’s healthy. People with in-demand skills find a door.
Illustrative · Photo: Kampus Production / Pexels