The 30-second take
Portugal sells itself on the things that are hard to fake. Sun most of the year, low violent crime, fast fiber in every city worth living in, and English that gets you through daily life without a word of Portuguese. That part is real, and it is why Lisbon and Porto filled up with remote workers between 2020 and 2024.
The bureaucracy is the other half of the story. The country that built its brand on the five-year passport doubled that timeline to ten years in May 2026. The famous NHR tax break closed to new arrivals at the end of 2023. The immigration agency that replaced SEF, called AIMA, sits on a backlog north of 400,000 cases. None of this makes Portugal a bad choice. It makes it a different choice than the one your friends raved about three years ago.
Why nomads come here
Start with the weather and the safety, because they do most of the work. Lisbon gets roughly 2,800 hours of sun a year. Portugal ranks near the top of the Global Peace Index, and solo travelers, women especially, consistently report feeling safe walking at night.
Then the practical layer. Home fiber runs 500 Mbps to 1 Gbps in the cities for 25 to 40 euros a month, and the median fixed download speed sits near 189 Mbps. English proficiency is among the highest in the world for a country where it is not an official language (EF ranks Portugal around 6th globally). You can land, get a SIM, find a café with power outlets, and be on a client call the same afternoon.
The visa menu is genuinely good too. The D8 was purpose built for remote employees and freelancers. The D7 has one of the lowest income thresholds in the EU for anyone with passive income. Both put you on a path to permanent residency in five years.
Why nomads leave
Money is the first reason. Lisbon rents climbed faster than almost anywhere in Europe, and the city now costs more than its salaries can explain. A central one-bedroom runs 1,200 to 1,500 euros a month on a local lease, and far more if you arrive on a short furnished contract. The D7's 920 euro income floor does not buy a Lisbon studio in 2026.
Paperwork is the second. AIMA appointments can take a year to land after you arrive, and people live in a strange limbo of bridge documents and automatic extensions while they wait. The 2026 citizenship change stung the long-term crowd most, since the path to a passport now takes ten years and the clock starts from the day your residence card is issued, not the day you apply.
Tax is the third. IFICI is narrower than the NHR it replaced. If you came expecting a decade of near-zero tax on foreign income, the math no longer works the way the old blog posts promised.
How Portugal scores
Portugal is excellent to live in and slower to settle in permanently. Tax efficiency and visa access are both strengths, though no longer best in class. Internet, safety, and quality of life are the country's standouts, about as good as anywhere in this guide. Cost of living is the clear weak point, pulled down almost entirely by Lisbon and Porto housing.
If your plan is one to three good years of remote work in a beautiful, safe, well-connected country, Portugal is close to ideal. If your plan is a fast passport and a permanent tax base, read the residency and tax pages closely before you commit. The cities are covered in depth too, starting with Lisbon.