Porta 65-Jovem 2026: how much rent support young renters get
A guide to Porta 65-Jovem in 2026: ages, income limits and how much of the rent the Portuguese state pays for tenants aged 18 to 35.
Porta 65-Jovem can cover up to roughly half your rent in the first year if you are aged 18 to 35 and renting a home to live in — and since 2024 you no longer even need a signed lease to apply. With rent eating an ever bigger slice of the average wage, it is one of Portugal’s most sought-after supports, and in 2026 the government topped up the budget again to meet demand.
Who can apply for Porta 65-Jovem?
Young people aged 18 to 35 (inclusive) on the application date can apply. For a couple, one partner may be up to 37 as long as the other is no older than 35. The home must be your permanent residence, and your household’s taxable income cannot exceed the limit: in 2026 that is the top of the 6th IRS bracket, or 43,090 euros a year.
How much of the rent does the state pay?
The support can reach about 50% of the rent in the first year and tapers down after that. The exact figure depends on your assigned band and the reference maximum rent for your area — not on what your contract actually costs. For scale: by September 2025 more than 45,000 young people had used the programme, with an average benefit of 275 euros a month.
What changed since 2024?
The most practical change is that you no longer need a rental contract to apply: your application is now eligible even before you have found a place, and a rent above the ceiling no longer disqualifies you automatically — the support is calculated on the reference maximum rent instead. The benefit runs for 12 months and can be renewed up to a maximum of 60 months, or five years.
It is worth having your documents and the simulator ready before the application window opens, as it is all done online. While the cost of buying keeps hitting records — we track it in our house-price tracker and in the rents that keep cooling month after month — supports like this are, for many young people, the difference between moving out of their parents’ home or waiting a bit longer. The official rules and form are on the Portal da Habitação and the gov.pt portal.
Image: Dale Cruse - 10M views from San Francisco, CA, USA / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 4.0)