Portugal
Portugal just doubled the wait for citizenship. What it means for Golden Visa applicants.
Portugal's revised Nationality Law, in force since May 2026, takes the path to citizenship from five years to ten (seven for EU and CPLP nationals) and starts the clock later. Here is what actually changes, and for whom.
For two decades, the pitch on Portugal’s Golden Visa ended the same way: spend about a week a year in the country, and in five years you can apply for one of the strongest passports in the world. As of May 2026, the second half of that sentence is no longer true.
Portugal’s revised Nationality Law took effect on 19 May 2026. It changes three things that matter to anyone holding, or considering, residence by investment.
What actually changed
The qualifying period doubled. The path to citizenship by naturalisation is now ten years of legal residence for most nationals, and seven years for citizens of the European Union and the Community of Portuguese Language Countries (CPLP). It was five years for everyone.
The clock starts later. Previously the count could run from the date you applied for residence. It now starts from the issuance of your first residence card. Given that AIMA processing backlogs have pushed card issuance well past a year in many cases, the practical wait is longer than the headline number suggests.
The bar is higher. Applicants now face an A2 Portuguese language requirement, a civic-knowledge test, and a formal declaration of adherence to democratic principles.
The Golden Visa programme itself remains open. The real-estate route is still closed (it has been since 2023), and the qualifying routes are still funds, capital transfer, research and donation. None of that moved. What moved is the prize at the end.
Who this actually affects
The instinct is to read “ten years” as a deal-breaker. For a specific kind of applicant, it is. For others, it changes very little.
If your goal was the Portuguese passport on the fastest possible timeline, Portugal is no longer the obvious answer, and a Caribbean citizenship-by-investment programme (citizenship on approval, no residence required) or a faster-naturalising EU jurisdiction deserves a fresh look.
If your goal was EU residence and mobility, with citizenship as a someday-option, the change is far less material. Portugal still offers one of the lowest physical-presence requirements in the EU and full Schengen access. The residence permit is doing the work; the longer citizenship clock is a footnote.
And if you are an EU or CPLP national, the seven-year track and your existing ties may make the maths look completely different from a non-EU applicant’s.
This is exactly the kind of change that makes a single headline number a poor basis for a six-figure decision. The right move depends on which of the three goals above is actually yours, your nationality, and whether you would realistically meet the new language and presence requirements.
The honest read
Portugal did not close. It repriced its citizenship in time rather than in euros. For mobility-first investors it remains one of the better residence programmes in Europe. For passport-first investors on a clock, the centre of gravity has shifted, and pretending otherwise would be the kind of stale advice this change just exposed across the industry.
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Sources
Written by
Robert McCray
Founder, CIVITAS
Robert McCray is the founder of CIVITAS, an independent investment-migration advisory that is paid by its clients rather than by the programs it analyses. He works across more than twenty residence and citizenship-by-investment programs and built the firm's open dataset and scoring tools to make the category legible.