Buy-to-let in Portugal yields 6.2%: returns are falling, but so is the risk
The gross yield on buying a home to rent out in Portugal fell to 6.2% in Q2 2026. Where returns are highest and why the risk has dropped too.
Buying a home to rent out in Portugal returned a gross 6.2% in the second quarter of 2026 — down from 6.9% a year ago and well below the 7.2% of 2024. The explanation is simple: purchase prices keep climbing much faster than rents, so every euro invested in bricks buys less rental income than it used to.
How much does buy-to-let yield in Portugal?
The national average sits at 6.2% gross per year, but the map is anything but uniform. Lisbon is, paradoxically, the worst buy-to-let deal in the country: a 4.3% yield, because purchase prices are at record levels. Faro and Porto follow at 4.8%. At the other end, Castelo Branco and Vila Real lead with 8.1% — buying cheap in the interior and renting out remains, on paper, the most profitable play.
Is a falling yield bad news?
Depends which side of the table you sit on. For the pure investor, yes: the return has shrunk. But there is a flip side the industry itself points out — lower yield also means lower risk. With an average of 24 applicants for every home listed, the odds of a property sitting empty are minimal, and the asset itself has kept appreciating: house prices have been setting fresh records in bank valuations tracked by Statistics Portugal (INE).
For anyone hunting for a home, none of this is much comfort: rents remain high, and landlords are now sharpening their pencils. The legal framework is moving too — the government approved changes to rental law this week that touch both new and old contracts.
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