
Portugal’s long-rumoured tightening of its migration regime became official on 22 October 2025 when Law 61/2025 was published in the Diário da República. The statute abolishes the popular “job-seeking visa” that since 2022 had allowed thousands of Brazilians to enter Portugal for up to 120 days (extendable to 180 days) while searching for employment. Effective 23 October, Portuguese consulates in Brazil and visa outsourcers such as VFS Global, BLS International and TLS Contact are legally barred from accepting further applications for this category.
What replaces it is a still-undefined “qualified job-seeking visa”, restricted to applicants with tertiary education, proven technical experience or profiles that match Portugal’s skills-shortage list (engineering, IT, health-care, research and green-tech are expected to dominate). Consular posts must wait for implementing regulations before they can launch the new channel, meaning a de-facto moratorium on new work-search filings—probably for several months.
For Brazilian professionals and employers the impact is immediate. According to Portugal’s Foreign Ministry, Brazilians accounted for roughly 42 % of the 19 300 job-seeker visas issued in 2024. Recruiters in Lisbon and Porto that rely on the scheme for entry-level service and construction talent now face pipeline disruption, while Brazilian graduates eyeing Europe as a springboard will need to reassess timelines and documentation strategies. Applications lodged on or before 22 October will continue to be processed under the old rules, but practitioners warn of possible scrutiny and longer adjudication as posts interpret the transition.
Immigration advisers recommend that corporates explore alternative routes—namely the D1 employer-sponsored permit, the new EU Talent Pool pilot, or intra-company transfers—although these options carry higher salary thresholds and processing complexity. Individuals with Portuguese ancestry could pivot to nationality claims, while digital nomads may leverage the D8 remote-worker visa, which remains unchanged.
In the medium term, the shift aligns Portugal with the EU trend of calibrating work-migration toward higher-skilled profiles, but it also risks pushing lower-skilled demand toward the informal economy or other Schengen states with more flexible entry paths. Brazilian authorities have not signalled retaliatory measures, but Brasília is expected to raise the issue in the next high-level Bilateral Mobility Dialogue set for December in Brasília.
What replaces it is a still-undefined “qualified job-seeking visa”, restricted to applicants with tertiary education, proven technical experience or profiles that match Portugal’s skills-shortage list (engineering, IT, health-care, research and green-tech are expected to dominate). Consular posts must wait for implementing regulations before they can launch the new channel, meaning a de-facto moratorium on new work-search filings—probably for several months.
For Brazilian professionals and employers the impact is immediate. According to Portugal’s Foreign Ministry, Brazilians accounted for roughly 42 % of the 19 300 job-seeker visas issued in 2024. Recruiters in Lisbon and Porto that rely on the scheme for entry-level service and construction talent now face pipeline disruption, while Brazilian graduates eyeing Europe as a springboard will need to reassess timelines and documentation strategies. Applications lodged on or before 22 October will continue to be processed under the old rules, but practitioners warn of possible scrutiny and longer adjudication as posts interpret the transition.
Immigration advisers recommend that corporates explore alternative routes—namely the D1 employer-sponsored permit, the new EU Talent Pool pilot, or intra-company transfers—although these options carry higher salary thresholds and processing complexity. Individuals with Portuguese ancestry could pivot to nationality claims, while digital nomads may leverage the D8 remote-worker visa, which remains unchanged.
In the medium term, the shift aligns Portugal with the EU trend of calibrating work-migration toward higher-skilled profiles, but it also risks pushing lower-skilled demand toward the informal economy or other Schengen states with more flexible entry paths. Brazilian authorities have not signalled retaliatory measures, but Brasília is expected to raise the issue in the next high-level Bilateral Mobility Dialogue set for December in Brasília.

