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10月 25, 2025

Portugal’s tougher Foreigners’ Law takes effect, raising barriers for Brazilian migrants

Portugal’s tougher Foreigners’ Law takes effect, raising barriers for Brazilian migrants
On 24 October 2025 Brazilian media carried extensive coverage of Portugal’s newly amended Lei dos Estrangeiros, which entered into force the previous day and immediately tightened entry, residence and family-reunification rules for non-EU nationals. Brazilians—who make up 31 percent of Portugal’s foreign population—are the main group affected.

Key changes include:
• end of the popular “regularise in country” option, meaning Brazilians who enter as tourists can no longer convert status without first securing a visa in Brazil;
• creation of an exclusive “highly qualified job-seekers” visa, shutting the door on most low-skilled applicants;
• longer (two-year) minimum residence before spouses and children can join under family reunification, up from zero; and
• extension of AIMA’s adjudication deadline for reunification cases from 90 to 270 days.

The Portuguese foreign ministry has suspended new job-seekers-visa appointments until the government defines the list of eligible professions. Existing Brazilian residents have 180 days to convert their permits to the new category where applicable. Failure to comply could jeopardise future Schengen renewals.

For Brazilian employers that second staff to Lisbon’s tech and shared-services hubs, the immediate operational impact is the need to secure work-residence visas in São Paulo, Rio or Brasília before deployment—a process that currently takes up to eight weeks. Experts recommend refreshing assignment timelines, budgeting for higher legal fees, and assessing whether Spain’s new digital-nomad visa might offer an alternative path in the Iberian market.
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