Portugal D7 vs D8 vs Golden Visa — Which Is Right for Americans in 2026?

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Citizenship law update (April 2026): Portugal’s Parliament re-approved an amended Nationality Law on 1 April 2026 (with the President for signature). For new applicants the residency requirement moves from 5 years to 10 years for non-EU/CPLP nationals (including Americans), with the clock starting from your first residence permit issuance. See our Portuguese citizenship guide for transition rules.
Considering Spain too? See our network site Settleguru for a side-by-side Spain vs Portugal showdown covering NLV vs D7, Beckham vs IFICI, cost of living, and healthcare.

Comparing nomad visas? See Best Digital Nomad Visas for Americans (2026) — Portugal D8 against Spain, Mexico, UAE and more.

Heading to your residence appointment? Read our AIMA appointment survival guide — documents, mistakes to avoid, and how to escalate a stuck file.

Need a Portuguese bank account? Read our FATCA-friendly Portuguese banks 2026 list — exactly which banks open accounts for U.S. citizens, what documents to bring, and the PFIC investment traps to avoid.

What about healthcare? Read our full Portugal SNS healthcare guide for Americans — how to enroll, what is free, when to add a private plan, and 2026 cost benchmarks vs U.S. coverage.

First step before anything else: get your Portuguese NIF remotely as an American — €150, 5–10 days, no flight required.

Where should you actually live? Compare Lisbon vs Porto vs Algarve for Americans in 2026 — rent, vibe, schools, transit, weather.

Budgeting your move? See Portugal cost of living for Americans in 2026 — real numbers by city, with four sample expat budgets.

TL;DR: If you’re an American with steady passive or remote income under ~$8,000/month, the D7 visa is the simplest and cheapest path. If you earn $4,000+/month from a foreign employer or clients, the D8 digital nomad visa is faster and more flexible. The Golden Visa still exists in 2026 — but only via fund or cultural-donation routes, with a €500,000+ outlay and almost no physical-stay requirement. All three eventually lead to permanent residency and EU citizenship after five years. This guide breaks down the real-world differences for U.S. applicants in 2026.

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The 30-second comparison

Factor D7 Visa D8 Digital Nomad Golden Visa
Best for Retirees, passive-income earners Remote employees & freelancers High-net-worth investors who do not want to relocate
Min. income / investment ≈ €920/month (Portuguese minimum wage) + €460/spouse + €276/child ≈ €3,680/month (4× minimum wage) €500,000 fund subscription or €250,000 cultural donation
Up-front cost €90 application + €170 residence permit €90 application + €170 residence permit €500K+ capital + €6,045 application + ~€3,200/family member
Stay requirement 16 months in first 2 years; no leaving for >6 consecutive months Same as D7 Just 7 days/year on average
Time to first residence card 4–8 months 3–6 months (faster of the two) 14–24 months (long backlog)
Path to citizenship Historically 5 years; 10 years for new American applicants under the April 2026 Nationality Law (clock from card issuance) + A2 Portuguese Historically 5 years; 10 years for new American applicants under the April 2026 Nationality Law (clock from card issuance) + A2 Portuguese 10 years for new American applicants under the April 2026 Nationality Law (clock from card issuance) + A2 Portuguese
Tax residency Yes — global income taxed in Portugal (with U.S. treaty + IFICI option) Yes — same as D7 Optional — only if you spend >183 days
2026 reality check Backlogs at AIMA improving; most stable choice Most popular new visa for U.S. remote workers Real-estate route is dead; only fund/cultural routes remain

Who should pick the D7

The D7 was created in 2007 for retirees and passive-income earners. In 2026 it is still the cheapest, most predictable path for Americans who can prove ~€11,040/year in passive or remote income (12× the 2026 monthly minimum wage of €920). “Passive” is interpreted broadly — Social Security, pensions, rental income, dividends, royalties, and increasingly, stable freelance billings all qualify if documented over the prior 12 months.

It is the right pick if you (a) want to actually live in Portugal full-time, (b) do not have an active foreign employer paying you €3,500+/month, and (c) want the lowest possible application friction. Retirees on Social Security plus a small pension routinely qualify. Read our D7 deep-dive for the document checklist and consulate timing.

Who should pick the D8

The D8 launched in October 2022 and is now the default visa for American remote workers. It requires four times the minimum wage (≈ €3,680/month in 2026) plus six months of bank statements showing the income arrived. It accepts W-2 salary, 1099 contractor income, and self-employment from foreign clients — but not Portuguese clients.

D8 is the right pick if you have a U.S. job you can keep remotely, your income is well above €3,500/month, and you would rather process under the newer, faster lane. Consulates have been clearing D8 files in roughly 60–90 days, versus 90–180 for D7. The full D8 guide covers the income-proof rules and the SEF/AIMA appointment.

Who should pick the Golden Visa (and who shouldn’t)

The Mais Habitação law killed the Golden Visa real-estate routes in October 2023. What is left in 2026: the €500,000 venture-capital or private-equity fund subscription, the €250,000 cultural-heritage donation, the €500,000 R&D contribution, and a few job-creation routes. Most American applicants choose the fund route through licensed Portuguese AIFs.

This is the right path only if you (a) have €500K+ in liquid capital, (b) do not actually want to move to Portugal, and (c) value the EU passport as a long-term hedge. The minimum stay is just seven days a year averaged over the residency period. Tax residency is optional unless you trigger the 183-day rule. See our Golden Visa 2026 update for current AIMA processing times — many applicants are waiting 18+ months for their first card.

Cost comparison over five years

Over the full pre-citizenship cycle, the picture looks very different from the headline numbers:

5-year total cost D7 D8 Golden Visa
Government fees (single applicant) ~€1,400 ~€1,400 ~€32,000
Lawyer / processing fees €2,000–4,000 €2,000–4,000 €10,000–20,000
Capital outlay None None €250,000–500,000
Tax exposure (worldwide) Yes (mitigated by IFICI) Yes (mitigated by IFICI) Optional — only if resident

For most Americans actually moving, the D7 or D8 is roughly 50–100× cheaper in real terms than the Golden Visa. The Golden Visa is functionally a financial product, not a relocation tool.

Tax: the part most Americans miss

If you become a Portuguese tax resident under D7 or D8, your worldwide income is taxable in Portugal. The IFICI regime (the NHR replacement) can cap qualifying income at 20% for ten years, but it is narrowly scoped to specific scientific, R&D, and high-value-added activities. Most retirees and standard remote workers will pay regular Portuguese rates (14.5%–48%) on the bulk of their income, offset by U.S. foreign tax credits via Form 1116.

Golden Visa holders who keep their tax residency outside Portugal avoid this entirely — that is the second biggest reason wealthy Americans still choose the GV in 2026, after the no-relocation flexibility.

Path to EU citizenship — the same finish line

All three routes have historically led to permanent residency at year five and Portuguese (and therefore EU) citizenship at year five. Under the April 2026 Nationality Law (re-approved by Parliament 1 April 2026, awaiting presidential signature), the residency requirement for new American applicants moves to 10 years from first residence permit issuance, contingent on:

  • Ten years of legal residency for new American applicants under the April 2026 Nationality Law (the residency clock — for all three routes — starts when your first card is issued, not when you applied)
  • Demonstrated A2-level Portuguese (CIPLE exam)
  • Clean criminal record in Portugal and country of origin
  • “Connection to the Portuguese community” (interpreted loosely)

U.S. citizens can hold dual nationality with Portugal — the U.S. does not require renunciation. After year five, your Portuguese passport is portable across all 27 EU member states for living and working.

Decision shortcut

  • You are retired or living off investments and want to actually move: D7.
  • You have a remote U.S. job paying €3,500+/month: D8.
  • You have €500K+ liquid and want EU citizenship without moving: Golden Visa (fund route).
  • You are a high-earning specialist in IFICI-eligible fields: D7 or D8 plus IFICI tax application.

Frequently asked questions

Can I switch from D7 to D8 (or vice versa) once I am in Portugal?

Yes. After your first renewal you can request a residency-purpose change at AIMA. In practice, switching is rare because both visas grant the same residence permit type after the consulate stage.

Does the Golden Visa still exist in 2026?

Yes, but only the fund (€500K), cultural donation (€250K), R&D, and job-creation routes. Property purchase no longer qualifies anywhere in Portugal. Many applicants are using the €500K venture-capital fund route.

Which visa is fastest for an American family of four?

D8, narrowly. Lisbon and San Francisco consulates are clearing D8 family files in 90–120 days; D7 family files take 120–180. Golden Visa families wait 18+ months for their first AIMA card.

Do I need to speak Portuguese for any of these?

No language requirement at the visa stage. You will need A2 Portuguese only when you apply for citizenship at year ten (under the April 2026 Nationality Law; previously year five — confirm transition rules with a Portuguese nationality lawyer).

Will I lose my U.S. citizenship?

No. The U.S. permits dual citizenship. You will continue filing U.S. taxes annually regardless of where you live — see the broader expat tax overview on Settleguru.

Next steps

Pick your route, then read the corresponding deep-dive: D7 · D8 · Golden Visa. If you are optimizing for taxes once you are resident, the IFICI guide is the next read.

Last reviewed: April 2026. We update this comparison whenever AIMA processing times or visa rules shift materially.

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