Portugal
Phone Code
+351
Capital
Lisbon
Population
10 Million
Native Name
Portugal
Region
Europe
Southern Europe
Timezones
Azores Standard Time
UTC-01:00
+2 more
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Portugal is a southwestern European country on the Iberian Peninsula, bordered by Spain and the Atlantic Ocean. Lisbon serves as the capital and largest city. Portugal has a population of approximately 10 million. The country has a rich maritime history as a global power during the Age of Discovery (15th-16th centuries) when Portuguese explorers including Vasco da Gama, Bartolomeu Dias, and Ferdinand Magellan pioneered sea routes to India, Brazil, Africa, and Asia, establishing a vast colonial empire. This heritage is evident in Manueline architecture, maritime monuments, and cultural influences shared with former colonies (Brazil, Mozambique, Angola). Portugal is the oldest nation-state in Europe with borders essentially unchanged since 1297. The 20th century saw dictatorship under Salazar (1932-1974) ended by the peaceful Carnation Revolution (1974), democratic transition, and EU membership (1986, euro adoption 2002). Modern Portugal is renowned for historic cities (Lisbon with hilly streets and iconic trams, Porto with port wine cellars and Ribeira waterfront), Atlantic beaches and surfing (Nazaré giant waves, Algarve golden beaches, Ericeira surf reserve), UNESCO World Heritage Sites (16 total including Sintra palaces, Belém monuments, Douro Valley, Évora), world-class wine regions (Port, Douro, Alentejo, Vinho Verde), distinctive Fado music (melancholic Portuguese soul), exceptional cuisine (seafood, pastéis de nata custard tarts, bacalhau cod dishes), and over 300 days of sunshine annually. Portugal has become increasingly popular for tourism (30+ million visitors), retirement, and remote work due to affordable cost of living (compared to Western Europe), excellent climate, safety, quality of life, and accessible residence visa programs (D7 visa for passive income, Golden Visa for investment, Digital Nomad visa). Portugal is a Schengen Area member offering visa-free entry for 90 days to citizens of the EU, US, UK, Canada, Australia, and many other countries. The country includes mainland Portugal plus the autonomous Atlantic island regions of Azores (volcanic archipelago) and Madeira (subtropical island known as the 'Pearl of the Atlantic').
Visa Requirements for Portugal
Portugal is a member of the Schengen Area, allowing visa-free entry for citizens of approximately 60 countries including the United States, Canada, United Kingdom (post-Brexit, 90 days visa-free in 180-day period), Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea, Singapore, and most Latin American countries for tourism and business purposes for up to 90 days within any 180-day period. EU/EEA/Swiss citizens have unlimited freedom of movement and residence. Passport must be valid for at least 3 months beyond intended departure from Schengen Area. Schengen visa-free days are cumulative across all 27 Schengen countries - travelers can stay maximum 90 days total across all Schengen countries in any 180-day period. No specific travel insurance requirement for visa-free visitors but recommended. Proof of sufficient funds and return ticket may be requested at border though rarely checked. Entry through Lisbon Portela Airport, Porto Francisco Sá Carneiro Airport, Faro Airport (Algarve), or land border with Spain. Citizens of approximately 100+ countries require Schengen visas applied through Portuguese consulates or VFS Global visa centers with standard documentation (application, passport valid 3+ months beyond stay, travel insurance minimum €30,000 coverage, proof of accommodation, financial means, return ticket, visa fee €80 adults / €40 children 6-12). Portugal follows standard Schengen visa policies. For longer stays, Portugal offers various residence visa programs that have made it popular among retirees, digital nomads, and investors: D7 visa (passive income/retirement visa for those with pensions or remote income, minimum approximately €760/month), Digital Nomad visa (for remote workers, requires employment contract or business, minimum income €3,280/month or 4x Portuguese minimum wage), and Golden Visa (residence by investment, requires real estate purchase €500,000+ or other qualifying investments). Travel to Portugal is generally very safe with low crime rates, excellent infrastructure, and well-developed tourism facilities. Portugal ranks among the safest countries globally.
Common Visa Types
Schengen Visa-Free Entry (Tourism/Business)
For tourism or business for citizens of approximately 60 countries including US, Canada, UK, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea, Singapore, and most of Latin America.
Schengen Short-Stay Visa (Type C)
For tourism, business, or visits for citizens of countries requiring visas (approximately 100+ countries including China, India, Russia, and most African countries).
D7 Visa (Passive Income / Retirement Visa)
Long-stay residence visa for retirees, pensioners, and individuals with passive income (rental, investments, remote work), extremely popular program.
Golden Visa (Residence by Investment)
Residence permit for non-EU investors making qualifying investments in Portugal, pathway to EU residence.
Important Travel Information
Travel Guide
Portugal is a revelation — a country at the western edge of Europe that enchants with dramatic Atlantic coastlines, melancholic Fado music, one of the continent's most exciting food scenes, and a warmth of people that is rare in Europe. Lisbon is built on seven hills above the Tagus estuary: a labyrinth of narrow cobblestone lanes, tiled azulejo facades, miradouro viewpoints over red rooftops, the legendary Tram 28 rattling through the Alfama quarter, and pastéis de nata warm from the oven at Pastéis de Belém (the original bakery, selling 20,000+ daily since 1837). The Belém district packs UNESCO monuments — Jerónimos Monastery, Belém Tower, Monument to the Discoveries — into a single riverside stretch. Porto in the north is grittier and more authentic: the Ribeira waterfront (UNESCO) tumbling down to the Douro, port wine cellars across the river in Vila Nova de Gaia (Taylor's, Sandeman, Graham's — tours with tastings EUR 15-25), the Livraria Lello (one of the world's most beautiful bookshops), and the iconic francesinha sandwich. The Algarve is Europe's sun guarantee: golden limestone cliffs, hidden coves, turquoise water, the sea caves of Benagil and rock formations of Ponta da Piedade. Sintra enchants with fairy-tale palaces — the colourful Pena Palace on its hilltop, the mystical Quinta da Regaleira with its Initiation Well descending 27 metres. Nazaré holds the world record for biggest waves ever surfed (30+ metres in winter). The Douro Valley offers terraced vineyards, port wine estates and river cruises through UNESCO-listed landscape. The Azores — volcanic islands in the mid-Atlantic with crater lakes, whale watching and green wilderness. Madeira — the 'Pearl of the Atlantic' with levada walks along centuries-old irrigation channels through subtropical forest. Portugal is affordable by Western European standards, famously safe (top 10 globally), and bathed in 300+ days of sunshine a year.
Ways to Experience This Destination
The Algarve delivers Europe's most reliable beach weather with 300+ days of sunshine: Praia Dona Ana and Ponta da Piedade in Lagos (golden cliffs, boat tours to grottoes EUR 15-25), Benagil sea cave (accessible by kayak or boat), Praia da Marinha (consistently ranked among Europe's finest beaches), and the wild Costa Vicentina on the western coast for surfing. North of Lisbon: Cascais and Costa da Caparica offer city-accessible beaches. The Azores and Madeira add volcanic black-sand beaches and natural ocean pools. Water temperature ranges from 15-19°C (wetsuit territory for surfing) to a swimmable 19-22°C in the Algarve in summer. Over 16,000 km of coastline — every type of beach from family-friendly resort strips to hidden coves reachable only by clifftop scramble.
Lisbon cascades over seven hills: the Alfama quarter (Moorish lanes, São Jorge Castle, Fado houses), Belém (Jerónimos Monastery, Belém Tower, pastéis de nata at the original bakery), Bairro Alto (nightlife), and Chiado (cafés, bookshops). Porto's Ribeira waterfront (UNESCO) and port wine cellars across the Douro in Vila Nova de Gaia are unmissable — then the Livraria Lello bookshop and São Bento station's azulejo murals. Sintra (30 minutes from Lisbon) is a fairy-tale concentration of palaces: Pena Palace, Quinta da Regaleira's Initiation Well, the Moorish Castle on the ridge. Évora in the Alentejo preserves a Roman temple, medieval walls and a chapel of bones. Coimbra has Portugal's oldest university (founded 1290) with a stunning Baroque library.
The Douro Valley (UNESCO) is where port wine grapes grow on impossibly steep terraced vineyards — river cruises, quinta estate visits and tastings make this one of Europe's great wine experiences. Port cellars in Vila Nova de Gaia (Taylor's, Graham's, Sandeman) offer tours with tastings EUR 15-25. Beyond port: Alentejo reds are Portugal's rising stars, Vinho Verde (slightly sparkling 'green wine' from the north) is perfect summer drinking, and Madeira wine has aged for centuries. Food: pastéis de nata, bacalhau (salt cod prepared 365 ways), grilled sardines (seasonal May-October), arroz de marisco (seafood rice), piri-piri chicken, and caldo verde. Lisbon's Time Out Market and Porto's food scene rival any in Europe. Restaurant meals EUR 10-18 at traditional tascas.
Portugal is Europe's surf capital. Nazaré produces the biggest waves on the planet — world-record 30+ metre walls of water at Praia do Norte (October-February), spectacularly viewable from the clifftop fort above. Ericeira is Europe's only World Surfing Reserve with 7+ breaks within 8 km. Peniche hosts World Surf League events at the powerful Supertubos barrel. Sagres in the Algarve offers multiple exposures ensuring year-round surfable conditions. Surf camps from EUR 30-80/day including accommodation, lessons and board rental make Portugal accessible for beginners. Water temperature requires a wetsuit (3-5mm depending on season). Best big-wave season: October-April; best for learning: June-September with smaller, warmer conditions.
Madeira's levada walks follow centuries-old irrigation channels carved into mountainsides through laurel forest (UNESCO) — dozens of routes from easy strolls to dramatic ridge walks with Atlantic panoramas. The Rota Vicentina on the southwest coast (Fisherman's Trail along clifftops, Historical Way through cork oak forests) is one of Europe's finest coastal long-distance paths. The Azores offer volcanic crater rim hikes, hot spring bathing, and whale watching (sperm whales year-round, blue whales in spring). Serra da Estrela is mainland Portugal's highest range with winter snow. Peneda-Gerês in the north is Portugal's only national park — granite peaks, waterfalls and wild horses.
The Azores — nine volcanic islands in the mid-Atlantic, 1,500 km from mainland Portugal. Crater lakes (Sete Cidades on São Miguel — twin blue and green lakes in a volcanic caldera), whale and dolphin watching, geothermal hot springs, lush green landscapes that feel closer to Iceland than Iberia. Madeira — the 'Pearl of the Atlantic' with subtropical gardens (Monte Palace), the levada walking network, Funchal's markets and Madeira wine tastings, and one of the world's most spectacular New Year's Eve fireworks. Both archipelagos offer year-round mild temperatures, dramatically different landscapes from the mainland, and direct flights from Lisbon, Porto and several European cities.
Money & Currency
Euro (EUR)
Currency code: EUR
Practical Money Tips
Euro (EUR) — Portugal is a full eurozone member; no currency exchange needed from other eurozone countries; GBP, USD, CHF exchangeable at banks and exchange offices in Lisbon, Porto, Faro, Coimbra; Multibanco ATMs are Portugal's own dense nationwide network — even in villages; avoid airport exchange counters for non-EUR currencies; best rates at city-centre exchange offices or ATM withdrawal
Portugal uses the Euro (EUR) and has been a eurozone member since 1999. Travelers from France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and other eurozone countries need no currency exchange. GBP, USD, and CHF are exchangeable at banks and city-centre exchange offices in Lisbon (Baixa, Rossio), Porto (Aliados, Bolhão), and Faro. Avoid airport exchange counters — rates are typically 5–8% worse. The best strategy for non-EUR travelers is withdrawing EUR from Multibanco ATMs on arrival. SEPA bank transfers from EU banks to Portuguese accounts incur no extra fees — relevant for long-stay visitors and digital nomads.
Multibanco — Portugal's own nationwide ATM network; extraordinarily dense, present in even small villages; Caixa Geral de Depósitos, Millennium BCP, Santander Totta, Novo Banco, BPI ATMs everywhere; always withdraw in EUR; Wise and Revolut work seamlessly; MB Way is Portugal's dominant mobile payment app but requires a Portuguese phone number — tourists cannot use it
Multibanco is Portugal's own interoperable ATM and payment network — one of the most comprehensive in Europe. ATMs are found even in villages, monasteries near Sintra, and island communities in the Azores and Madeira. Major bank ATMs: Caixa Geral de Depósitos (CGD), Millennium BCP, Santander Totta, Novo Banco, BPI. Always withdraw in EUR. Wise and Revolut cards work well at Multibanco ATMs with competitive rates. MB Way is the dominant Portuguese mobile payment app (peer-to-peer transfers and shop payments) but requires a Portuguese mobile number and bank account — tourists cannot use MB Way.
Excellent card acceptance — Visa and Mastercard accepted almost everywhere including small restaurants, tascas, and markets; Apple Pay and Google Pay work very well throughout Portugal (French and Italian banking apps fully compatible); MB Way requires Portuguese phone number — tourists cannot use it; contactless payments ubiquitous; very tourist-friendly payment infrastructure across Lisbon, Porto, Algarve, Azores, and Madeira
Portugal has excellent card payment infrastructure. Visa and Mastercard are accepted in virtually all restaurants, cafés, shops, hotels, supermarkets, and at most markets. Apple Pay and Google Pay work very well throughout Portugal — compatible with French, Italian, German, Spanish, and UK banking apps. MB Way is Portugal's dominant local mobile payment app but requires a Portuguese phone number and bank account — tourists cannot use it. Contactless payments are ubiquitous. Smaller tascas (traditional taverns) in rural areas may prefer cash — carry some EUR. American Express acceptance is more limited outside major hotels.
Affordable outside Lisbon/Algarve tourist areas: budget guesthouse Porto/Évora/Braga from EUR 35–60/night; mid-range hotel Lisbon EUR 100–200/night; restaurant meal EUR 12–25; pastel de nata EUR 1.20–1.80; Sintra Palace tickets EUR 8–14; Douro Valley wine tour EUR 40–80; tipping 5–10% appreciated but not mandatory; service charge not typically auto-added
Portugal offers excellent value, especially outside Lisbon's tourist centre and the Algarve. Budget guesthouse in Porto, Évora, or Braga: EUR 35–60/night. Mid-range hotel in Lisbon or Algarve: EUR 100–200/night. Restaurant meal (prato do dia — daily special): EUR 9–14 — outstanding value including soup, main, and drink. Fine dining: EUR 30–60/person. Pastel de nata at a pastelaria: EUR 1.20–1.80. Sintra National Palace: EUR 10. Azores: generally 20–30% cheaper than mainland Portugal. Madeira: similar to mainland. Tipping: 5–10% is appreciated and appropriate; service is not typically auto-added to bills.
Note: Always check current exchange rates before traveling. Currency exchange is available at airports, banks, and authorized money changers.
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Planning a trip to Portugal? Whether you need to check Schengen visa-free eligibility, apply for a D7 retirement visa, or verify entry requirements — get step-by-step guidance.
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