Freedom FilesFreedom Files
🇵🇹 Portugal

Portugal D8 Visa

Keep your US job, build a Portuguese base. €3,680/month in remote-work income, three-to-four-month processing, and a path to an EU passport in ten years.

Financial req
€3,680/mo income
Processing
3 to 4 months
Naturalization
10 years
Presence required
183+ days / year
Download the briefing

The basics of the D8 Visa

What it is

The D8, often called the Digital Nomad Visa, is a long-stay residency visa for non-EU citizens earning active foreign-source income through remote employment or contracting. You demonstrate monthly income of at least four times the Portuguese minimum wage, apply through the Portuguese consulate that covers your US state, attend a single SEF/AIMA appointment in Portugal, and receive a two-year residency permit. The card renews on a three-year cycle, converts to permanent residency at year five, and citizenship petition becomes possible at year ten.

Who it’s for

  • Remote employees of US companies with documented salary and remote-work authorization
  • Independent contractors with consistent foreign-source contract income (€3,680/month+)
  • Founders running US LLCs or S-corps that pay them through documented salary or distributions
  • Families who want full-time Portuguese life with active income flexibility, not just passive income
  • Tech, finance, consulting, and creative professionals already structurally remote

Why it’s beneficial

The D8 is the only Portuguese residency program built for active-income earners who haven't crossed into pension or passive-income territory. You skip the €250K Golden Visa investment, you can work for your US employer or US clients, and the processing is the fastest of the three Portuguese routes. The trade-off, as with the D7, is the 183-day presence rule – this is a program for clients who actually want to live in Portugal, not store optionality.

Key benefits

The outcomes the D8 Visa actually delivers, beyond the headline numbers. The six that matter most to our clients.

  1. Keep your US job or contracts

    The D8 explicitly permits employment by or contracting for non-Portuguese entities. Your W-2 from a US employer or your 1099s from US clients qualify, provided the work is performed remotely and the income is reliably documented.

  2. Fastest Portuguese residency route

    Consular processing of complete files runs 60 to 90 days; SEF/AIMA issues the residency card within another month or two of arrival. End-to-end you can be in Portugal with a card in hand inside 4 months – faster than the D7 and dramatically faster than the Golden Visa's current backlog.

  3. Family on the same application

    Spouse or registered partner, dependent children up to age 26 (in education and unmarried), and dependent parents over 65 join under one filing. The income threshold scales by family size: +50% for spouse, +25% per child.

  4. Schengen mobility from day one

    The residency card grants visa-free travel across the 27 Schengen countries. Practical for client meetings, family travel, and the structural value of European mobility while keeping a US-employer base.

  5. Path to EU citizenship

    After ten qualifying years of legal residency, you can petition for Portuguese naturalization. Dual citizenship is permitted; the United States does not require renunciation. A B1-level Portuguese language certification is required at year ten.

  6. No Portuguese employer required

    Unlike work permits or the D2 entrepreneur visa, the D8 doesn't require a Portuguese employer, business sponsorship, or local hire. Your existing US income picture stands on its own – provided the documentation holds up to consular review.

Financial requirements

The financial threshold to qualify, with the documentation we walk every client through.

Active foreign-source income

€3,680/month

Demonstrate monthly active-source income at or above four times the Portuguese minimum wage (currently €3,280/month minimum for 2026, with a 12% buffer we recommend). Eligible sources: salary from a foreign employer with remote-work authorization, contractor income from foreign clients, founder distributions from foreign-incorporated companies. Family thresholds scale by size.

Choosing the right route is half the work. We model the comparison against your portfolio in the Consult.

How the process works

  1. Contact us

    Reach out and tell us about your situation. From there, you’ll either book a 60-minute Freedom Consult (if you’re weighing options across countries) or get started on this route directly (if you already know it’s the right fit).

  2. Engagement and document gathering

    We coordinate the document pack: FBI background check (apostilled), birth and marriage certificates, twelve months of bank and brokerage statements, employment letter or contractor agreements, US tax returns, the remote-work authorization from your employer, and the Portuguese-counsel power of attorney.

  3. NIF and Portuguese bank account

    We arrange your Portuguese tax identification number (NIF) and a Portuguese bank account. The consulate requires evidence of a funded Portuguese account; insufficient funding history is the most common D8 stall point.

  4. Portuguese accommodation

    You need a Portuguese address – typically a twelve-month lease in Lisbon, Porto, Cascais, the Algarve, or one of the digital-nomad-hub coastal towns. Our relocation partners arrange this through the document-gathering phase.

  5. Consular submission

    Our Portuguese counsel coordinates the file submission to the Portuguese consulate covering your US state. You attend a single appointment for biometrics and document review. Consular processing for complete D8 files currently runs 60 to 90 days.

  6. Arrival and SEF/AIMA appointment

    You enter Portugal on the D8 visa within 120 days of issuance. AIMA schedules your residency-card appointment within two months of arrival. The card is valid for two years, renewable for three-year increments.

  7. Maintain compliance and renew

    Spend at least 183 days per year in Portugal. Continue to meet the income threshold at each renewal. Permanent residency at year five; citizenship petition at year ten with a B1-level Portuguese language certification.

Processing

Temporary residency

Permanent residency

Citizenship

3-4 months

Years 1-5

Years 5-10

Year 10+

D8 Visa versus the alternatives

How this program stacks against the closest credible options for the same visitor. We don’t earn more if you choose one over another.

DimensionPortugal D8 VisaPortugal D7 VisaLearn morePortugal Golden VisaLearn more
Minimum financial bar€3,680/mo active income€920/mo passive income€250K capital outlay
Presence required183+ days / year183+ days / year7-14 days / year
Processing3-4 months4-6 months12-24 months
Time to citizenship10 years10 years10 years
Right to work in PortugalYes (foreign-employer remote work)No (passive income only)Yes
Family inclusionSpouse, children, parentsSpouse, children, parentsSpouse, children, parents
Capital recoverableIncome-based (n/a)Income-based (n/a)Donation: no. Fund: 8-10 yrs

The D8 fits remote workers and contractors with active foreign income. The D7 fits retirees, pensioners, and passive-income holders. The Golden Visa fits investors with capital but minimal day-count flexibility. We don't earn more if you pick one over another.

Want a four-page Portugal PDF covering everything on this page plus the comparison framework we use internally?

No spam ever! Unsubscribe in one click.

Why clients work with us

Three reasons families pick Freedom Files over the do-it-yourself path or a single-jurisdiction agent.

First-hand experience

The D8 is Portugal's youngest residency category and consulates are still calibrating. We know which evidence packages move and which get bounced.

Honest recommendations

About a third of D8 inquiries end with our recommendation against engagement. We tell you when the D7 or Golden Visa fits cleaner.

Pro counsel from the start

Every engagement runs with US-licensed counsel from the first call. Treaty and structuring implications are planned before the application is filed.

What income qualifies for the D8?

Active-source foreign income: salary from a foreign employer (typically your US W-2 employer) with documented remote-work authorization, contractor income from foreign clients on 1099s, or founder distributions from a foreign-incorporated company you actively run. The consulate weights stability heavily – twelve months of consistent income from a single primary source carries more weight than a patchwork of gig income.

Do I have to spend 183 days per year in Portugal?

Yes. Like the D7, the D8 expects substantial Portuguese presence – at least 183 days per year, or no more than six consecutive months outside Portugal in any twelve-month period. Falling short can lead to non-renewal and breaks the citizenship-clock continuity. If you want EU residency without the day-count, the Golden Visa is the correct choice.

What about US taxes once I'm a Portuguese tax resident?

Once you cross 183 days in Portugal, you become a Portuguese tax resident. You file in both countries: US worldwide-income filing continues for US citizens; Portugal taxes you on worldwide income at standard rates (the NHR new-resident regime was abolished in 2024). The US-Portugal treaty handles double-taxation through foreign-tax credits. US-licensed counsel maps your specific picture before you trigger residency.

Can I work for a Portuguese employer on the D8?

Not initially. The D8 is built specifically for foreign-employer or foreign-client income. If your situation changes – say you accept a job with a Portuguese company – you would need to convert to a different residency basis (typically a work permit or a renewed status under a different category). We map the conversion process if it becomes relevant.

What is the total cost beyond the income demonstration?

Plan on €2-4K in government and administrative fees (visa application, residency card, family-member fees), €4-7K in Portuguese legal fees through our partner counsel, €1-2K in translation and certification costs, and accommodation deposit plus twelve months of rent. Total cash outlay for a clean single-applicant engagement typically lands in the €15-25K range, plus the accommodation lease.

Can my family join me on the D8?

Yes. Spouse or registered partner, dependent children up to age 26 (in education and unmarried), and dependent parents over 65 qualify on the principal application. The income threshold scales: +50% of the base for the spouse, +25% per child. Each family member receives the same residency rights and the same ten-year clock to citizenship.

What's the difference between the D8 and the old NHR regime?

Different things. The D8 is a residency-permit category; the NHR (Non-Habitual Resident) was a tax regime that gave new Portuguese tax residents reduced rates on foreign-source income for ten years. NHR was abolished in 2024. The D8 residency permit still exists; it just doesn't come with the tax sweetener it once did. Standard Portuguese tax rates apply to your worldwide income once you're a tax resident.

Ready to talk?

Two paths in. If the D8 Visa is clearly the right program for your family and you’re ready to engage, contact our team directly. If you’re weighing this against other programs and want an honest read on the right move, the Freedom Consult is the sixty-minute conversation that ends the loop.

Contact our team →

We take a small number of new families each quarter.

Get your custom Plan B Blueprint

Most people spend 100+ hours researching residency and citizenship options before they realize they were looking at the wrong programs. We compress that into 10 questions, 90 seconds, and a single report.