From Investment to Portuguese Passport: Complete Timeline

The Golden Visa provides a pathway to EU citizenship. Current law allows eligibility after 5 years; Law 61/2025 proposes extending this to 10 years for non-CPLP nationals (status: under constitutional review).

Citizenship timeline journey illustration

Overview

One of the Portugal Golden Visa's most compelling features is the pathway to EU citizenship. Portuguese citizenship comes with one of the world's most powerful passports (186+ visa-free countries).

Current Law vs. Proposed Changes: Under existing legislation, citizenship eligibility begins after 5 years of legal residency. However, Law 61/2025 proposes extending this to 10 years for non-CPLP nationals—this proposal is currently under constitutional review and not yet in effect.

Critical: Application-Date Counting Rule: Under the current favorable interpretation, your residency period counts from application submission, not from when your residency card is issued. This protects applicants from AIMA processing delays (currently 18-24 months). An applicant in early 2025 can reasonably expect citizenship eligibility by 2030 under current rules.

This guide walks through the complete timeline from investment to passport, covering both current and proposed scenarios. For live regulatory updates, see our Regulatory Status page.

Important: This content is for informational purposes only. Consult licensed Portuguese legal and financial advisors for guidance specific to your circumstances.

How long until citizenship? Use our Timeline Simulator below to map every milestone.

Complete Timeline Overview#

Here's what to expect over the full journey:

Year 0: Pre-Application (2-4 months)

  • Obtain NIF and open Portuguese bank account
  • Select and subscribe to qualifying fund
  • Gather and prepare documentation

Year 0-1: Initial Application (12-18 months)

  • Submit Golden Visa application
  • Attend biometric appointment in Portugal
  • Receive initial 2-year residency card

Year 2: First Renewal

  • Submit renewal application
  • Prove investment maintenance
  • Receive renewed card (valid 2 more years)

Year 4: Second Renewal

  • Submit second renewal application
  • Receive card valid through year 5+

Year 5: Citizenship Eligibility

Year 6-7: Citizenship Granted

  • Receive Portuguese citizenship
  • Apply for Portuguese passport
  • Full EU citizenship rights

Total Timeline: Approximately 6-7 years from initial investment to passport in hand.

Initial Application Phase (Months 1-18)#

Pre-Submission (Months 1-4)

Before you can apply, you must:

  1. Obtain your Portuguese NIF (tax number)
  2. Open a Portuguese bank account
  3. Complete your fund investment
  4. Gather all required documentation
  5. Engage a Portuguese lawyer (recommended)

Application Submission

Your lawyer submits the application to AIMA (Agency for Integration, Migrations and Asylum—formerly SEF). The application includes:

  • Completed application forms
  • Investment proof documentation
  • Personal and family documents
  • Criminal record certificates
  • Health insurance proof

Biometric Appointment

After initial review (typically 3-6 months), you'll be scheduled for a biometric appointment in Portugal. This involves:

  • Fingerprinting
  • Photo capture
  • Document verification
  • Brief interview

You must attend in person. Family members also need individual appointments.

Card Issuance

After the biometric appointment, AIMA processes your application. Current processing times are 6-12 months. When approved, you receive:

  • Residency card valid for 2 years
  • Card allows unlimited entry to Portugal
  • Schengen travel rights (90/180 days in other countries)

Maintaining Your Residency (Years 1-5)#

During your 5-year residency period, you must:

1. Maintain Your Investment
Your fund investment must remain in place for the entire period. Early withdrawal means losing your residency status.

2. Meet Minimum Presence Requirements
You must spend an average of 7 days per year in Portugal. This is calculated as:

  • 14 days in the first 2-year period, OR
  • 7 consecutive days in year 1, and 7 in year 2

The requirement is among the most lenient in Europe.

3. Complete Renewals on Time

  • First renewal: End of year 2
  • Second renewal: End of year 4

Renewal applications must be submitted before your current card expires. The process typically takes 2-4 months.

4. Keep Documents Updated
Maintain valid:

  • Passport
  • Health insurance
  • Criminal record (updated for renewals)
  • Investment documentation

5. Track Your Presence
Keep records of your time in Portugal:

  • Entry/exit stamps
  • Flight records
  • Hotel receipts
  • Any evidence of presence

Citizenship Requirements#

After 5 years of legal residency, you can apply for citizenship. Requirements:

1. Language Requirement: A2 Portuguese
You must demonstrate basic Portuguese proficiency at A2 level (elementary). Options:

  • CAPLE (Centro de Avaliação de Português Língua Estrangeira) exam
  • CIPLE certificate
  • Some heritage Portuguese speakers may qualify for exemptions

A2 level means you can:

  • Understand simple sentences about familiar topics
  • Communicate in routine situations
  • Describe your background and immediate environment

Most applicants achieve A2 with 3-6 months of dedicated study.

2. Clean Criminal Record
Updated criminal record checks from:

  • Portugal
  • Your country of nationality
  • Any country of long-term residence

3. Ties to Portugal
Evidence of connection to Portugal:

  • Property ownership (not required but helpful)
  • Bank accounts
  • Tax compliance
  • Social connections

The minimal presence requirement (7 days/year) is usually sufficient for citizenship, though having deeper ties strengthens your application.

4. No Threats to National Security
Standard security screening through Portuguese intelligence services.

Not Sure Which Fund Fits Your Profile?

Share your timeline, risk tolerance, and tax situation — we'll match you with the right funds in under 2 minutes.

The Citizenship Application Process#

Preparing Your Application

Gather these documents:

  • Birth certificate (apostilled, translated)
  • Criminal record certificates
  • Portuguese language certificate
  • Proof of legal residence (5+ years)
  • Tax compliance certificate from Portuguese authorities
  • Proof of ties to Portugal
  • Valid health insurance

Submission

Applications are submitted to the Central Registry Office (Conservatória dos Registos Centrais). Your Portuguese lawyer typically handles this process.

Processing Time

Current processing times vary significantly:

  • Standard processing: 12-24 months
  • Complex cases: May take longer

The 2025 nationality law reforms may affect processing times—see below.

Decision

When approved:

  1. You receive notification of citizenship grant
  2. Schedule appointment to receive Portuguese ID card
  3. Apply for Portuguese passport
  4. Your Portuguese citizenship is permanent—it cannot be revoked for moving abroad or not visiting

Dual Citizenship

Portugal allows dual citizenship. You can keep your original nationality (if your home country allows) while becoming Portuguese. Check your home country's laws—some countries require you to renounce upon acquiring new citizenship.

The Application-Date Counting Rule (Critical)#

Understanding when your residency clock starts is crucial for timeline planning.

Current Favorable Interpretation

Under the current interpretation (2024/2025), the five-year residency period counts from application submission and payment of the processing fee—NOT from first residency card issuance.

Why This Matters

With AIMA processing times at 18-24 months, the permit-date interpretation would add ~2 years of "dead time":

ScenarioApplicationCard IssuedCitizenship Eligible (5yr)
Application-Date RuleJan 2025Jul 2026Jan 2030
Permit-Date RuleJan 2025Jul 2026Jul 2031

Law 61/2025 Proposal

Law 61/2025 proposes counting from first residence permit issuance. Combined with the proposed 10-year requirement, this "Administrative Drag" would significantly extend timelines.

What This Means for 2025 Applicants

Under the current Application-Date Counting Rule:

  • An applicant submitting in Q1 2025 can reasonably expect citizenship eligibility by 2030
  • AIMA processing delays do not add to your citizenship timeline
  • This provides protection against the backlog

Strategic Recommendation: Apply as early as feasible to potentially lock in the application-date counting method under current rules.

For detailed analysis of both laws, see our Regulatory Status page.

Tip

Under current rules, your citizenship clock starts when you submit your application—not when your card arrives. An applicant in 2025 can target 2030 for citizenship eligibility regardless of AIMA delays.

Law 61/2025: Proposed 10-Year Timeline#

Law 61/2025 proposes significant changes to naturalization requirements. Here is the current status:

Proposed Changes

  1. Extended Residency: 10 years for non-CPLP nationals (vs current 5 years)
  2. CPLP Exception: CPLP nationals (Brazil, Angola, Mozambique, etc.) retain 7-year pathway
  3. Counting Method: Proposes counting from permit issuance (vs application date)

Current Status: Under Constitutional Review

The law is being reviewed by the Constitutional Court. Key questions:

  • Whether retroactive application violates constitutional protections
  • How existing applicants will be treated
  • Interpretation of "legal residency" start date

Likely Scenarios

ScenarioImplication for 2025 Applicants
Law invalidated5-year pathway continues
Law upheld with grandfatheringExisting applicants protected under 5-year rule
Full implementation10-year requirement applies (timeline uncertain)

What's Unchanged (Regardless of Law 61)

  • Golden Visa holders remain eligible for naturalization
  • A2 Portuguese language requirement confirmed
  • Dual citizenship still permitted

Practical Implications

  1. Apply Early: Lock in your application under current rules
  2. Plan for Both Scenarios: Ensure fund term aligns with potential 10-year path
  3. Monitor Updates: The landscape is evolving; work with advisors who track changes
  4. Start Language Learning: A2 requirement applies regardless

For live updates on Law 61/2025 status, visit our Regulatory Status page.

Important

Law 61/2025 is under constitutional review—not yet implemented. The proposed 10-year timeline may be modified or invalidated. Current applicants should proceed under existing 5-year rules while monitoring developments.

What Portuguese Citizenship Gets You#

EU Citizenship Rights

  • Live and work in any EU country without visa or work permit
  • Access to EU healthcare and education systems
  • Right to vote in EU elections
  • Consular protection from any EU country worldwide

Passport Power

  • Visa-free access to 186+ countries
  • 6-month visa-free stays in UK (post-Brexit)
  • ESTA eligibility for US travel
  • One of the top 5 most powerful passports globally

Family Benefits

  • Your children born after naturalization are Portuguese citizens
  • Spouse may have expedited path to citizenship (3 years of marriage)
  • Future generations inherit citizenship

No Residency Requirement

  • Unlike residency, citizenship is permanent
  • You can live anywhere in the world
  • No minimum presence requirement once you're a citizen
  • Cannot be revoked for non-residence

Business & Investment

  • Establish businesses anywhere in EU
  • Access to EU banking without foreign national restrictions
  • Investment opportunities throughout EU

Security & Stability

  • Permanent fallback option for political/economic uncertainty
  • EU legal protections and rights
  • Access to EU social security coordination

Citizenship Timeline Simulator

Compare the current 5-year path vs the proposed 10-year path under Law 61/2025. See how fund term alignment, administrative delays, and fee drag affect your investment.

Citizenship Path

Fund Parameters

Current Law (5 years)

Residency5 years
+ Admin delay~21 months
Total timeline6.8 years
Net IRR (after fees)3.54%
Estimated net value€637,970

Proposed Law (10 years)

Residency10 years
+ Admin delay~21 months
Total timeline11.8 years
Net IRR (after fees)3.54%
Estimated net value€637,970
5yr gap

Administrative Drag: ~21 Months

AIMA processing typically adds 18-24 months to the citizenship timeline. This extends the effective holding period beyond the nominal residency requirement. Factor this into your fund term alignment.

Year-by-Year Timeline

YearBalanceFee PaidStatusMilestone
0€500,000
Residency
Investment & Application
1€520,725€8,750
Residency
2€542,309€9,113
Residency
Admin delay ends (~21 months)
3€564,788€9,490
Residency
4€588,198€9,884
Residency
5€612,579€10,293
Residency
Citizenship eligibility (5-year path)
6€637,970€10,720
Residency
7€637,970
Fund Expired
Estimated citizenship grant (with admin delay)
8€637,970
Fund Expired

Start Your Path to EU Citizenship

The first step is selecting the right fund for your situation. Our independent advisory matches you with CMVM-approved funds based on your risk profile and tax situation.