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  1. Home/
  2. From Brazil/
  3. Portuguese Republic/
  4. D3 visa (highly qualified activity)

🇧🇷 Brazilian applicants · 🇵🇹 Portuguese Republic

D3 visa (highly qualified activity) for Brazilian citizens

Residence visa for highly qualified workers with a Portuguese employment contract.

Requires employer sponsorshipLeads to permanent residency2+3 year pattern leading to permanent residence or citizenship.

This page covers the D3 visa (highly qualified activity) specifically for Brazilian applicants — including document requirements, consular procedures, and common issues specific to Brazil. The general eligibility criteria apply to everyone.

What Brazilian applicants should know

Brazilian highly qualified workers form one of the largest D3 cohorts, particularly in fintech, SaaS, and renewable-energy roles. Shared language eliminates the integration friction that other nationalities face. Brazilian degrees from CAPES-accredited institutions are recognised on standard terms; apostille via the Brazilian MFA.

Source: Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Portugal) · Reviewed 2026-06-01 · Confirm current rules on the primary source linked in the sidebar.

Processing time
2 months – 4 months
Government fees
€110 visa; €170 residence permit.
Typical duration
2+3 year pattern leading to permanent residence or citizenship.
Sponsorship required
Yes
Leads to permanent residency
Yes
Reviewed 1 June 2026Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Portugal) ↗

Bilateral context

  • Schengen Area
  • Portuguese ancestry eligibility

Consular processing: São Paulo / Rio de Janeiro / Brasília

Tourist entry vs. this route

Yes — Brazilian nationals can enter Portuguese Republic without a visa for short tourism (typically up to 90 days), but tourist entry does not authorise the activity covered by the D3 visa (highly qualified activity).

Key figures for Brazilian applicants

Computed from our continuously re-verified, primary-sourced data. Indicative, not legal advice.

How long it takes

2 months – 4 months

2–4 months consular.

Verified 1 June 2026 · Portuguese Consulate network — National visas →

Time to permanent residence

Arrival → permanent residence (5 years) → citizenship eligibility (10 years of residence, or 7 for EU/CPLP nationals).

Leads to Autorização de Residência Permanente, then Portuguese citizenship.

IRN — Portuguese nationality →

Visa overview

The D3 visa covers foreign nationals coming to Portugal to exercise a highly qualified activity under a contract with a Portuguese employer. It works alongside the EU Blue Card route and is typically used for skilled migration outside the Blue Card salary threshold.

Eligibility

Typical criteria

  • ✓Employment contract with a Portuguese employer for a highly qualified role.
  • ✓Salary at or above the D3 threshold (1.5× Portuguese average salary for the role).

Common blockers

  • !Role not judged highly qualified.
  • !Salary below the threshold.

Typical evidence

  • ·Employment contract.
  • ·Qualification evidence.

Application pathway

  1. 01

    Secure qualifying Portuguese employment

    Employer offers role with salary meeting the D3 threshold.

  2. 02

    Apply at consulate

    Submit D3 visa application.

  3. 03

    Attend AIMA appointment

    Receive residence card after arrival.

Other Portuguese Republic routes covered for Brazilian applicants

  • D7 visa (passive income / retirement)

    Residence visa for non-EU nationals with stable passive income (pensions, rental income, dividends).

  • D8 visa (digital nomad / remote work)

    Residence visa for remote workers employed by or freelancing for companies outside Portugal.

  • D2 visa (entrepreneur / self-employment)

    Residence visa for business owners, founders, and self-employed workers establishing activity in Portugal.

  • Portugal Golden Visa (residence by investment)

    Residence-by-investment route; real-estate and capital-transfer pathways were closed in October 2023, but fund-investment and other options remain.

  • Family reunification (residence)

    Residence authorisation for family members of legal residents in Portugal.

Not sure Portuguese Republic is right for you? Compare similar routes

Other countries offer work sponsored routes that Brazilian nationals also apply to. See how they compare.

  • 🇬🇧 United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

    Brazilian applicants — work sponsored routes

  • 🇮🇪 Republic of Ireland

    Brazilian applicants — work sponsored routes

  • 🇩🇪 Federal Republic of Germany

    Brazilian applicants — work sponsored routes

  • 🇪🇸 Kingdom of Spain

    Brazilian applicants — work sponsored routes

Frequently asked questions

Are Brazilian citizens eligible for the D3 visa (highly qualified activity)?+−

Eligibility for the D3 visa (highly qualified activity) is set by Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Portugal) and is not nationality-restricted beyond the general criteria, though Brazilian applicants may also have access to the following bilateral or treaty frameworks: Schengen Area, Portuguese ancestry eligibility. See the criteria below for the published requirements.

Where do Brazilian applicants typically file the D3 visa (highly qualified activity)?+−

São Paulo / Rio de Janeiro / Brasília. Specific intake (online portal, biometrics centre, or in-country lodgement) is determined by Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Portugal) — confirm the current intake channel on the primary source linked above before filing.

Do Brazilian applicants need a tourist visa for Portuguese Republic as well?+−

Yes — Brazilian nationals can enter Portuguese Republic without a visa for short tourism (typically up to 90 days), but tourist entry does not authorise the activity covered by the D3 visa (highly qualified activity).

How long does the D3 visa (highly qualified activity) take to process from Brazil?+−

The typical published decision window is 2 months – 4 months. Brazilian applicants usually file via São Paulo / Rio de Janeiro / Brasília, and consular-post backlogs can add to the wait. Source: Portuguese Consulate network — National visas, verified 1 June 2026.

How long until permanent residence in Portuguese Republic?+−

Arrival → permanent residence (5 years) → citizenship eligibility (10 years of residence, or 7 for EU/CPLP nationals). The route leads to Autorização de Residência Permanente, then Portuguese citizenship. See IRN — Portuguese nationality for the qualifying-residence rules.

How does D3 compare to the EU Blue Card?+−

Portugal implements both. The EU Blue Card has a higher salary threshold (typically 1.5× Portuguese average gross annual remuneration) and slightly different mobility benefits across the EU. The D3 is often used as a national alternative for workers who do not meet the Blue Card threshold but who qualify for highly qualified status.

What salary do I need for the Portugal D3 visa?+−

The D3 targets highly qualified roles, with a salary benchmark generally set around 1.5 times the Portuguese average gross remuneration for the position. Because it tracks national averages, confirm the current figure on the VistosMNE guidance before relying on a number.

Does the Portugal D3 lead to citizenship?+−

Yes. The D3 follows the standard 2+3-year residence pattern, and after five years of lawful residence you can apply for permanent residence or Portuguese citizenship (citizenship also requires A2 Portuguese). Confirm current timelines with AIMA.

This is not legal advice

We publish neutral, sourced information about immigration routes. Rules and thresholds change often — always verify details on the official government source linked on this page and consult a regulated immigration advisor before applying.