Housing in Portugal: government approves faster evictions and a social rent subsidy
Portugal's Council of Ministers approved a new rental regime on Thursday with quicker evictions and a social rent subsidy funded by a new Housing Emergency Fund.
Portugal’s Council of Ministers approved a housing package on Thursday that pulls on two ends of the same rope at once: it makes evictions faster when tenants stop paying, and it creates a social subsidy for people who cannot afford their rent. One measure protects landlords who go unpaid; the other protects tenants who have run out of options.
What changes for evictions?
The government approved a new version of the urban rental regime that speeds up eviction in cases of continued non-payment, making court decisions quicker. It also foresees the unfreezing of old rents predating 1990 — one of the most sensitive points in Portugal’s housing debate.
And for tenants who cannot pay?
For those households, a Housing Emergency Fund (FEH) is being created to finance a social rent subsidy aimed at people who cannot absorb rent increases and those who lose their home to eviction. The idea is that making evictions easier should not leave people on the street with no safety net.
When does it take effect?
Not immediately. The rental-regime changes go through a bill that must pass the Assembly of the Republic and be voted on. The Housing Emergency Fund, by contrast, will be created by decree-law, signed by Prime Minister Luís Montenegro and Infrastructure Minister Miguel Pinto Luz — a shorter road.
See also our tracking of rents in Portugal and affordable rent in Porto. Official measures are published on the government portal.
Image: Thomas from Vienna, Austria / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 2.0)