The one rule that catches everyone
Stay in Portugal for 183 days or more in a 12-month period and you become a Portuguese tax resident. That is the line. Cross it and Portugal can tax your worldwide income, not just the money you earn or bring into the country.
This is the trap that blindsides new arrivals. People hear "digital nomad visa" and assume the visa says something about tax. It does not. Tax residency is about days and ties, not about which visa is stamped in your passport. A tourist who overstays the count can become a tax resident. A D8 holder who keeps careful track of days can sometimes avoid it in year one.
What residents actually pay
Portuguese income tax is progressive across nine brackets in 2026. The lowest band sits around 13.25 percent. The top band reaches 48 percent on income above roughly 81,199 euros, and a solidarity surcharge of 2.5 to 5 percent stacks on top of very high incomes. Thresholds rose about 3.5 percent this year to track inflation.
For a remote worker earning a normal salary with no special regime, that progressive scale is what applies to your worldwide income once you are resident. It is a European tax rate, not a nomad-hub tax rate. That surprises people who came for the lifestyle and assumed the tax bill came with it.
IFICI, the regime that replaced the famous one
You will read a lot of old content praising NHR, the Non-Habitual Resident regime. Ignore the parts that tell you to apply for it. NHR closed to new arrivals on 31 December 2023, with a short transitional window that ended 31 March 2025. If you arrive now, it is not an option.
What exists now is IFICI, the Tax Incentive for Scientific Research and Innovation, sometimes called NHR 2.0. It offers a 20 percent flat rate on Portuguese employment and self-employment income for ten consecutive years, and the ten years do not renew. To qualify you must become tax resident after 1 January 2024, you must not have been resident in the prior five years, you must never have held NHR, and your work has to fit a qualifying high-value category. Think science, technology, R&D, and specific specialist roles.
Read the difference carefully, because it is the whole story. NHR exempted most foreign income for a decade. IFICI mainly caps qualifying Portuguese-source income at 20 percent. It does not blanket-shelter foreign passive income the way its predecessor did. For a remote employee of a foreign company, the benefit is real but narrower, and eligibility is not automatic.
Crypto, the genuinely good news
Portugal kept one of the friendliest crypto regimes in the EU. Hold a coin for 365 days or more and the gain is tax-free when you sell. Hold it under 365 days and the gain is taxed at 28 percent. Staking and lending yields face 28 percent, and trading at a professional scale gets pushed onto the progressive income scale.
One change to note. DAC8 reporting started on 1 January 2026, which means exchanges share more data with tax authorities across the EU. The long-term exemption survives. The privacy around it does not.
Social security and VAT, briefly
Employees pay 11 percent to social security and employers pay 23.75 percent. Self-employed workers pay 21.4 percent. If you stay insured in another EU country, an A1 certificate can keep you out of the Portuguese system. Standard VAT is 23 percent on the mainland, with lower rates in Madeira at 22 percent and the Azores at 16 percent.
Do this before you move
Map your day count for the calendar year, since 183 days is the switch. Check whether your role genuinely qualifies for IFICI rather than assuming it does. Confirm whether a double taxation treaty covers your home country, because Portugal has around 80 of them but not with every jurisdiction. Then sit down with a Portuguese accountant registered with the OCC and run the real numbers. This page points you in the right direction. It is not a substitute for advice from someone who signs their name to your return.
For the longer arc, the residency page covers what tax residence means for permanent status and the new ten-year citizenship timeline.