"Moderate" rent: what changes for tenants and landlords
6% VAT on construction, landlord income tax dropping to 10%, and bigger deductions for renters. A quick guide to the housing measures now kicking in.
There’s one word running through everything the Government is doing on housing: “moderate.” And it’s worth understanding what it means for your wallet.
The core idea is to pull more homes into controlled prices, with tax carrots on both sides of the counter. For renters, the income-tax deduction on rent rises in steps — €900 in 2026 and €1,000 from 2027. For landlords, the income-tax rate on moderate-rent contracts drops from 25% to 10%, and there’s a capital-gains exemption if sale proceeds are reinvested into moderate-rent housing.
Construction joins in too
To push supply, VAT was set at 6% on building homes worth up to €648,000 (or, for rentals, with rents up to €2,300 — that “moderate” threshold again). There’s also a new Affordable Rental Regime, capping rents at 80% of the median per-m² value in each municipality.
What it’s worth in practice
The anchor numbers for 2026: “moderate” monthly rent up to €2,300 and a “moderate” sale price up to roughly €660,982. Sound high? In Lisbon and Porto, sadly not really — and that’s where most of the incentives are aimed. For municipalities like Lousada, the per-m² ceilings are much lower, so the “moderate” yardstick is always local. The eternal question hangs in the air: enough to bring rents down, or just to slow the climb? The end of the year will tell.
Illustrative · Photo: Ivan S / Pexels