Empresa na Hora: how to start a company in Portugal for 360 euros — 2026 guide
Empresa na Hora lets you incorporate a company at an IRN desk in under an hour for 360 euros. What's included, what documents to bring and what comes next.
Starting a company in Portugal can take less time than lunch: through the Empresa na Hora (“company in an hour”) service, a company is incorporated at a single desk, in a single sitting, for 360 euros. It is probably the Portuguese public service most praised by newcomers — and in 2026 it remains the fastest route from idea to a company with a registration number.
How much does Empresa na Hora cost?
The base fee is 360 euros, paid on the spot, and it covers the essentials: the commercial registration, the mandatory legal publications and one year of access to the company’s permanent certificate. Extras apply in specific cases: registering a trademark in the same sitting costs 200 euros more (plus 44 euros per additional class of goods or services), and capital contributions in non-monetary assets pay 50 euros per property, quota or shareholding.
If you’d rather handle everything remotely, the alternative is Empresa Online on the ePortugal portal: 220 euros with a pre-approved standard articles of association, or 360 euros if the partners draft their own. The in-person service runs at IRN desks, registry offices and Loja do Cidadão citizen shops across the country — the official list and conditions are on the service page at gov.pt.
What documents do I need?
Fewer than you’d think. Each partner brings ID (citizen card, passport or residence permit), a Portuguese NIF and, where applicable, a social-security number. At the desk you pick a company name from the pre-approved pool — or bring a name-admissibility certificate requested in advance if you want a custom one — and adopt one of the standard articles of association. Share capital is free: since the 2011 reform, a private limited company (Lda.) can be born with one euro per partner, though a symbolic capital that low can weigh on credibility with banks and suppliers.
You walk out with almost everything: registration number, NIPC (the company’s tax number), articles of association, the permanent-certificate access code and automatic social-security registration.
What happens after incorporation?
The company exists, but it can’t invoice yet. Three steps trip up the distracted: filing the declaration of start of activity with the tax office within 15 days (companies need a certified accountant for this), opening a company bank account and depositing the capital, and checking whether the activity needs specific licences. Only then do the first invoices go out.
Run the numbers before choosing the format: if you’re starting alone and lean, registering as a self-employed worker is cheaper and reversible; a company pays off when there are partners, risk to ring-fence or growing revenue. And if you’re moving to Portugal with a business project, the process slots neatly into the D2 entrepreneur visa route.
Frequently asked questions
Can a foreigner use Empresa na Hora?
Yes. You need valid ID and a Portuguese NIF — residency is not required. Non-resident partners should plan for the extra step of getting the NIF first, which may require a fiscal representative.
Can I create any type of company at this desk?
The service covers private limited companies (Lda.), single-member limited companies and public limited companies (SA). Excluded are companies whose capital involves in-kind contributions requiring valuation, and activities that depend on special prior authorisations.
Does Empresa na Hora include an accountant?
No. The company leaves the desk incorporated, but the start-of-activity declaration requires a certified accountant — best to have one lined up before you go.
Image: Rakoon / Wikimedia Commons (CC0)