Remote Worker Tax Guide · 🌐 →🇵🇹 · Updated 31 May 2026
EU Citizen Working Remotely in Portugal— Tax Guide 2026
What taxes you pay, which country taxes you, visa options, and what €50,000 nets in Lisbon.
Your situation at a glance
EU citizens: free movement. Portuguese IRS applies after 183 days. IFICI available.
§ 01
Where do you pay tax?
Residency-based taxation
Portugal taxes its tax residents on worldwide income. You become a tax resident once you spend more than 183 days in Portugal in a given year, or once your centre of vital interests shifts there.
Days of presence include partial days. Border-runs to game the clock are routinely challenged by tax authorities.
Home country obligations
Once tax residency shifts to Portugal, your home country typically only taxes income sourced there. File a departure return in the year you leave.
Treaty
The Home–Portugal Double Taxation Agreement
The DTA allocates taxing rights and provides a foreign tax credit so the same income is not taxed twice. Article 15 typically governs employment income — taxable where the work is physically performed, with credit relief in the country of residence.
§ 02
Net salary in Portugal
Adjust your gross salary below to see take-home under Portugal tax rules. Uses the 2025 bracket schedule and a flat social-security rate of 11.0%.
- Gross
- €50,000
- Social security (11.0%)
- − €5,500
- Income tax
- − €12,004
- Net / year
- €32,496
- Net / month (14 payments)
- €2,321
- Effective rate
- 35.0%
§ 03
How to legally live and work in Portugal
EU freedom of movement
As an EU citizen, you have the right to live and work in Portugal without a visa. Register with the local municipality within 90 days of arrival. Tax residency begins after 183 days, or sooner if your centre of vital interests shifts to Portugal.
Tax incentive
IFICI regime
IFICI is a special tax regime offered by Portugal to qualifying new residents. Eligibility typically requires not having been a tax resident in the prior 5 years, employment in a qualifying activity, and registration in the first year of residence.
Full deep-dive guide for IFICI — coming soon.
§ 04
Cost of living in Lisbon
Monthly expenses for a single person living centrally — Q1 2026 data.
§ 05
Before you move — what to sort
- Register as an EU resident with the local municipality within 90 days
- Notify the your home country tax authority of your departure and file a partial-year return
- Register with the Portugal tax authority within 30 days of arrival to obtain a fiscal number
- Open a local bank account, or use a multi-currency alternative (Wise / Revolut)
- Arrange local health cover — EHIC (EU) or private cover (non-EU) for the first 6 months
- File your first Portugal annual return by the statutory deadline
- Apply for the IFICI regime in your first year of residence — it is rarely available retroactively
§ 06
Questions
Do EU Citizen pay tax in Portugal?+
Yes — after 183 days of presence or once your centre of vital interests shifts, Portugal taxes worldwide income.
Can EU Citizen work remotely in Portugal?+
As an EU citizen, no visa is required. Register with the local municipality within 90 days of arrival.
Do I need a visa to work remotely in Portugal as a EU Citizen?+
No — EU freedom of movement applies.
How much tax do EU Citizen pay in Portugal?+
Portugal applies a progressive income tax with a top marginal rate of 48.0% plus social security at 11.0%. For a €50,000 gross, the effective tax rate is roughly 35.0%.
Is there a double taxation agreement between the home country and Portugal?+
Yes — a Double Taxation Agreement is in force between the home country and Portugal, providing credit relief so the same income is not taxed twice.
What is the IFICI regime in Portugal?+
IFICI is a special tax incentive for qualifying expatriates in Portugal. It can substantially lower the effective rate for new residents during a defined window. EU citizens: free movement. Portuguese IRS applies after 183 days. IFICI available.
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