Portugal wants to poach AI talent from the world — and will fast-track visas to do it
The government is preparing a faster visa regime to attract AI specialists. A bet to reverse the brain drain.
For years, the conversation about talent in Portugal was always the same and always sad: the best trained here and went off to earn abroad. Now the government wants to flip part of that equation — and artificial intelligence is the bait.
The idea is simple to state, hard to execute: create a faster visa regime to attract AI specialists from around the world to come and work in Portugal. Instead of months of bureaucracy, a clear path for those who master one of the planet’s most coveted skills.
Why it makes sense
AI isn’t built only with expensive computers; it’s built with people who know how to make them think. And those people are rare, costly and chased by half the world — from the United States to the Gulf, every country wants the same engineers. Without a red carpet at the door, Portugal risks watching the train go by.
Add this to the newly approved National AI Agenda, and the strategy becomes clear: attract brains from abroad while modernising the state and trying to lift national productivity, today around 75% of the European average.
The usual catch
The risk lives in execution. Announcing fast visas is easy; making them work in a system many immigrants know for its slowness is another story — just ask anyone who’s dealt with the queues and deadlines. If the regime really is nimble, it can be a magnet; if it’s just another promise, specialists will pick another destination without blinking.
The intention is good and the direction is right. What’s missing is the part that usually fails: delivery.
Illustrative · Photo: RDNE Stock project / Pexels