Portugal's D8 visa: keep your job, change your country.
Last verified: 2 July 2026The D8 is Portugal's residence visa for remote workers — people earning a salary or freelance income from employers and clients outside Portugal. The income bar is four times the D7's, but if you're mid-career with a US or Canadian remote job, it's usually the right door.
- €3,680/month average remote income required — 4× the Portuguese minimum wage (≈ $4,200)
- Evidence: roughly the last 3 months of payslips, contracts, or client invoices
- Income must come from work performed remotely for employers/clients outside Portugal
- Savings buffer: commonly ~€11,040 in a Portuguese account — consular practice, varies
- 4–7+ months realistic end-to-end timeline · 2-year permit → 3-year renewal → PR at year 5
- Citizenship at 10 years (since May 2026)
D8 or D7? The one-minute answer
Income type decides it. Pension, Social Security, dividends, rents — that's passive income, and the D7 at €920/month. A salary from a US employer, or freelance income from clients abroad — that's active remote income, and the D8 at €3,680/month. Consulates check the substance: a D7 application resting on a remote salary will bounce.
| D7 | D8 | |
|---|---|---|
| Income type | Passive (pension, rents, dividends) | Remote work for foreign employers/clients |
| Monthly requirement (2026) | €920 (1× SMN) | €3,680 (4× SMN) |
| Typical applicant | Retiree, 55+ | Working professional, 30–55 |
| Path after arrival | Identical: 2-yr permit → 3-yr renewal → PR at 5 yrs → citizenship at 10 yrs | |
What consulates want to see
- Employees: employment contract with a non-Portuguese employer, a letter permitting remote work from Portugal, and ~3 months of payslips averaging €3,680+
- Freelancers/contractors: client contracts, invoices, and bank statements showing consistent income at the threshold
- Everyone: NIF, Portuguese bank account with a savings buffer, 12-month accommodation, apostilled FBI/RCMP background check, travel medical insurance (€30,000 minimum coverage, some consulates now asking 12-month validity)
The process mirrors the D7: apply at the Portuguese consulate or VFS centre covering your state or province, receive a 4-month two-entry visa, fly to Portugal, complete AIMA biometrics, and receive a 2-year residence permit. Since Law 61/2025 (October 2025) there is no way to regularise after arriving visa-free — the consular application is mandatory.
The tax picture — read this before you commit
Move mid-career and you'll likely become Portuguese tax resident (183+ days), taxable on worldwide income at 12.5%–48%. Two things soften it. Social security: the US and Canadian totalization agreements prevent double contributions. Income tax: IFICI — the 20% flat regime for 10 years — covers many tech, scientific, and higher-qualified roles, but eligibility rules are specific and registration closes 15 January of the year after you become resident. Americans keep filing with the IRS regardless; the FEIE shelters up to $132,900 of earned income in tax year 2026. Full picture in Tax & Finance.
Realistic timeline
- Months 0–2: NIF, Portuguese bank account, accommodation, background checks, employer letter
- Months 2–5: consular processing (statutory 60 days; often longer)
- Months 4–7+: arrival, AIMA biometrics (1–3 months' wait, sometimes 6), permit issued
Sources
- Portuguese MFA — residency visa documentation: vistos.mne.gov.pt
- 2026 minimum wage €920 (basis of 4× threshold): portugal.gov.pt (17 Dec 2025)
- Law 61/2025 (end of manifestation of interest): Diário da República
- Organic Law 1/2026 (10-year citizenship): diariodarepublica.pt
- IFICI: Portaria 352/2024/1; PwC 2026 · FEIE: IRS.gov (TY2026)
- Totalization agreements: SSA.gov; canada.ca
- D8 evidence requirements corroborated by 2026 consular checklists and Global Citizen Solutions (2026); savings and fee figures reflect consular practice and vary.