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  1. Home/
  2. From Brazil/
  3. Portuguese Republic/
  4. D8 visa (digital nomad / remote work)

🇧🇷 Brazilian applicants · 🇵🇹 Portuguese Republic

D8 visa (digital nomad / remote work) for Brazilian citizens

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

No sponsorship requiredLeads to permanent residencyResidence track: same 2+3 year pattern as D7, leading to permanent residence or citizenship.

This page covers the D8 visa (digital nomad / remote work) 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 nationals make up the largest D8 applicant pool — shared language and the CPLP framework give Brazilians the smoothest D8 path of any nationality. Two items are worth verifying before relying on the historical five-year-to-citizenship horizon. Portugal's nationality law entered active legislative reform from late 2025, with proposals lengthening the qualifying residence period for non-CPLP nationals; CPLP residents (Brazilians included) are positioned to retain a shorter clock but the final framework was still in motion at the time of writing — confirm the current position with the Portuguese consulate at application stage. Separately, the CIPLE A2 Portuguese-language naturalisation test is effectively a formality for native speakers, but the certificate itself still has to be filed with the citizenship application. Brazilian Federal Police criminal-record certificates process online in 5–10 working days and apostille via Itamaraty.

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
Visa application approximately €110; residence permit around €170.
Typical duration
Residence track: same 2+3 year pattern as D7, leading to permanent residence or citizenship.
Sponsorship required
No
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 D8 visa (digital nomad / remote work).

Key figures for Brazilian applicants

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

Salary you must earn

€44,160/yr

D8 (Digital Nomad) — remote-work income

Verified 1 January 2026 · AIMA — Residence visas →

How long it takes

2 months – 4 months

2–4 months consular processing; like the D7, the AIMA residence-card appointment is the post-arrival bottleneck.

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 D8 visa launched in October 2022 and has become Portugal's headline digital-nomad route. Eligibility turns on regular remote income from outside Portugal at roughly 4× the Portuguese minimum wage. Two sub-tracks exist: a temporary-stay visa (up to 1 year) and a residence visa leading to long-term residence.

Eligibility

Typical criteria

  • ✓Remote employment or freelance contract with non-Portuguese employer(s).
  • ✓Monthly income at or above 4× Portuguese minimum wage (approximately €3,680/month in 2026; verify).
  • ✓Proof of accommodation in Portugal.
  • ✓Criminal record certificate.
  • ✓Tax residency evidence from home country.

Common blockers

  • !Income below threshold (4× minimum wage).
  • !Work performed for Portuguese clients — this does not qualify under D8.

Typical evidence

  • ·Employment contract or client contracts.
  • ·6+ months of bank statements showing income.
  • ·Accommodation evidence.

Application pathway

  1. 01

    Obtain NIF and accommodation

    Tax number, bank account, and rental contract or property.

  2. 02

    Gather income evidence

    Typically 6 months of statements at the threshold; remote employment contract or client evidence.

  3. 03

    Apply at Portuguese consulate

    Submit D8 residence visa application.

  4. 04

    Travel and attend AIMA appointment

    Arrive within the 4-month visa; receive 2-year residence card at AIMA appointment.

  5. 05

    Renew and progress to long-term residence

    After 5 years of lawful residence, apply for permanent residence or citizenship.

Recent policy changes affecting this route

What changed most recently on this route — each linked to its primary government source.

  • 1 October 2024In force 1 October 2024

    Portugal tightens D8 digital-nomad documentation requirements

    AIMA clarified documentation expectations for the D8 digital-nomad visa, standardising how contract income, remote-work arrangements, and minimum income evidence are assessed.

    Agência para a Integração, Migrações e Asilo (AIMA) →

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).

  • 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.

  • D3 visa (highly qualified activity)

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

  • 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 digital nomad routes that Brazilian nationals also apply to. See how they compare.

  • 🇪🇸 Kingdom of Spain

    Brazilian applicants — digital nomad routes

  • 🇦🇪 United Arab Emirates

    Brazilian applicants — digital nomad routes

  • 🇮🇹 Italian Republic

    Brazilian applicants — digital nomad routes

  • 🇪🇪 Republic of Estonia

    Brazilian applicants — digital nomad routes

Frequently asked questions

Are Brazilian citizens eligible for the D8 visa (digital nomad / remote work)?+−

Eligibility for the D8 visa (digital nomad / remote work) 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 D8 visa (digital nomad / remote work)?+−

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 D8 visa (digital nomad / remote work).

What salary do Brazilian applicants need for the D8 visa (digital nomad / remote work)?+−

The D8 (Digital Nomad) — remote-work income floor is €44,160/yr, effective 1 January 2026 (AIMA — Residence visas). Your occupation's published going rate may bind higher — whichever is greater applies.

How long does the D8 visa (digital nomad / remote work) 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.

Can I work for a Portuguese company on a D8 visa?+−

The D8 is designed for remote work with non-Portuguese employers. If you take Portuguese-sourced employment, you typically need a different route (D1 subordinate work visa or D2 self-employment visa).

Does the D8 count toward Portuguese citizenship?+−

Yes. Like D7, the D8 residence track counts toward the 5-year residence requirement for naturalisation.

What is the difference between the Portugal D7 and D8 visas?+−

Both lead to residence, but the income source differs: the D8 (digital nomad) is for active remote-work income earned from outside Portugal at roughly 4 times the minimum wage, while the D7 is for passive or stable income such as pensions, rental, or dividends at a lower threshold. Choose D8 if you are actively working remotely, and D7 if you are living on passive income.

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.