Opening a company in Portugal — Lisbon business district

Business · 10 min read

How to Open a Company in Portugal: The Complete 2026 Guide

Portugal has quietly become one of the best countries in Europe to start a business. Ranked in the global top ten for ease of company registration, 100% foreign ownership allowed, no Portuguese language requirement, a competitive 21% corporate tax rate, and full access to the EU single market — the fundamentals are hard to beat. This guide walks you through everything: company types, registration steps, real costs, and the mistakes that cost people weeks of delays.

01 — Why Portugal for Your Business?

Let's start with the question most foreign entrepreneurs ask first: why Portugal specifically, and not another EU country?

  • EU market access from day one — A Portuguese company can invoice, contract, and operate across all 27 EU member states without additional registration or local entities.
  • Low corporate tax — The mainland rate is 21%, with even lower rates in the Azores (14.7%) and certain Madeira free zones. Compare that to France at 32%, Germany at ~30%, or the Netherlands at 25.8%.
  • Startup Framework incentives — Portugal has specific legislation supporting startups: reduced corporate tax rates in early operational years, exemptions on stock option taxation, and property acquisition waivers for qualifying companies.
  • No foreign ownership caps — 100% foreign ownership is legal and common. No Portuguese shareholder is required. No restrictions on profit repatriation.
  • Low fraud environment — Portugal has one of the lowest fraud rates in the eurozone (0.009% per transaction), meaning a stable, trustworthy commercial environment.
  • Path to residency — Forming a company and demonstrating genuine economic activity is one of the key qualifying pathways for the D2 Entrepreneur Visa, Portugal's dedicated residency route for business founders.

"Portugal's company registration is ranked in the world's top ten for speed and simplicity. The entire registration process can take less than one business day."

02 — Choosing Your Company Structure

The most important decision you'll make upfront is the legal structure. Portugal offers several entity types, but 95% of foreign entrepreneurs choose one of three:

Most Popular

Lda. (Quotas)

Shareholders: 2 or more
Min. capital: €2
Liability: Limited to company assets
Best for: Partnerships, joint ventures, small–medium businesses

Unipessoal Lda.

Shareholders: 1
Min. capital: €1
Liability: Limited to company assets
Best for: Solo founders, freelancers, single-owner operators

S.A. (Anónima)

Shareholders: 5 minimum
Min. capital: €50,000
Liability: Limited to share value
Best for: Large investments, institutional backers, future public listing

For most foreign entrepreneurs, the choice is between Lda. and Unipessoal Lda. Both offer limited liability, minimal capital requirements, and no foreign ownership restrictions. The Unipessoal is simpler for a single founder; the Lda. is standard for anything with two or more shareholders.

💡 Golden Visa note: If you're pursuing a Golden Visa through business investment, you generally need a company that creates a minimum number of jobs (5+ or 10+ depending on the investment threshold). An S.A. or Lda. with multiple employees is more typical in this scenario. Ask us about the specifics if this applies to you.

03 — Step-by-Step: How to Register a Company in Portugal

Here's the full process from zero to a registered, operating Portuguese company:

  1. Get your NIF (Portuguese Tax Number) Every shareholder and director needs a Portuguese NIF before the company can be formed. For non-residents, this requires a fiscal representative. Timeline: ~1–2 weeks remotely. See our NIF guide →
  2. Get a Social Security Number (NISS) — if needed If you or any director will be working in Portugal, a NISS is also required. It can be obtained in person or via the "NISS na Hora" service. Free of charge.
  3. Choose and approve your company name Submit your preferred name to the National Registry of Legal Entities (IRN) for approval. You can choose from a list of pre-approved names (instant, no extra fee) or submit a custom name (takes up to 7 working days, costs ~€75). Your approved name certificate is valid for 3 months.
  4. Prepare articles of association The articles define your company's purpose, shareholder structure, and internal rules. You can use a standardized template (faster, cheaper) or a customized deed for more complex structures.
  5. Open a company bank account (for share capital deposit) You'll need a Portuguese bank account to deposit the initial share capital before registration. The minimum deposit for an Lda. is just €2, but banks have their own KYC requirements. Most require an in-person visit. Timeline: 1–5 business days.
  6. Register the company Three methods: Empresa na Hora (all parties appear in person at a registration centre — done in under 1 hour, €360); Empresa Online (remote, requires digital signature, €220–360, 5–10 days); or through a notary and the Commercial Registry (slower, higher cost, best for complex structures).
  7. File the Declaration of Commencement of Activity This must be filed with the Tax Authority (AT) within 15 days of registration. It activates your company's tax status and VAT obligations.
  8. Register the Ultimate Beneficial Owner (RCBE) Mandatory by law — you must register all beneficial owners with the Central Registry of Beneficial Owners within 30 days of incorporation. Failure results in fines.
Company registration documents Portugal
Portugal's Empresa na Hora service allows same-day company registration at Commercial Registry offices across the country.

04 — Real Costs: What You'll Actually Pay

One of the most common sources of confusion is the split between government fees and service fees. Here's a transparent breakdown:

ItemCostNotes
NIF registration (per person)€15–20Government fee; plus service fee if using a provider
Company name approval (custom)€75Not needed if you use a pre-approved name
Company registration — Empresa na Hora€360€435 if using a custom name at the counter
Company registration — Empresa Online€220–360Lower if using pre-approved articles; 15% discount applies online
Commercial registry certificate€25–70Optional; annual subscription
Virtual office / registered address€20–80/moRequired if no physical premises in Portugal
Typical total (gov. fees only)€360–510Excluding service fees and ongoing costs
⚠️ Hidden cost to watch for: Banks in Portugal can be slow with account opening for non-residents. Budget 1–3 weeks and in some cases a dedicated trip to Portugal. This is often the longest part of the process — not the registration itself.

05 — Tax Advantages for Portuguese Companies

Portugal's tax environment for companies is genuinely competitive within Europe:

  • 21% corporate income tax (IRC) — Standard mainland rate. The Azores region offers 14.7%, and the Madeira International Business Centre offers rates as low as 5% on qualifying income from international transactions.
  • Reduced rates for startups — Under the 2023 Startups Framework, qualifying companies pay reduced IRC rates in their first operational years. The government actively wants new businesses to incorporate and stay.
  • Participation exemption — Dividends received from subsidiaries and capital gains on the sale of shares are largely exempt from tax under Portugal's participation exemption regime — highly relevant for holding structures.
  • VAT rates — Standard 23% on the mainland, with lower rates on certain goods and services (6% and 13%). Azores applies 4%, Madeira 5% as standard VAT.
  • R&D tax credits — The SIFIDE program provides generous credits for R&D spending — up to 32.5% on qualifying expenditure — making Portugal attractive for tech and innovation companies.
  • Extensive double-tax treaty network — Portugal has treaties with 80+ countries, reducing or eliminating withholding taxes on dividends, interest, and royalties flowing between Portugal and treaty partners.

"A Portuguese company pays 21% corporate tax — compared to 32% in France, 30% in Germany, and 25.8% in the Netherlands. With full EU market access, the arithmetic is hard to argue with."

06 — Common Mistakes (and How to Avoid Them)

Having helped multiple entrepreneurs through this process, here are the mistakes that consistently slow things down:

  • Skipping the NIF step — You cannot incorporate without a NIF for every shareholder. People often underestimate how long this takes (2–3 weeks if done remotely for the first time) and start the process too late.
  • Choosing the wrong structure — Setting up a Unipessoal when you have a business partner, or an S.A. when you only have two shareholders and €5,000 to invest, creates legal complications and unnecessary costs. Get advice before filing.
  • Ignoring the RCBE deadline — The beneficial owner registration is mandatory within 30 days of incorporation. Fines for non-compliance start at €1,000. Most people forget about it because it's a separate filing from the company registration.
  • Not filing the commencement declaration — Filing within 15 days of incorporation is legally required to activate your tax status. Missing this creates penalties and delays your ability to legally issue invoices.
  • No Portuguese address — A registered office address in Portugal is legally required. You can use a virtual office service, but you must have one before you can register.
  • Underestimating the bank account step — Portuguese banks are conservative with non-resident account opening. Some banks decline, others require extensive documentation. Plan for this before starting the registration process, not after.
💡 Our approach: We handle all of the above for you — structure consultation, NIF setup, name approval, registration, commencement filing, and RCBE registration — so nothing falls through the cracks. See our Company Incorporation service →

07 — Company Formation and the D2 Entrepreneur Visa

If your goal isn't just to operate a business in Portugal but to live there, the D2 Visa (Entrepreneur and Startup Visa) is the most direct route. It requires you to have either:

  • A registered company with a genuinely viable business plan, or
  • An invitation from a recognized Portuguese incubator, or
  • Evidence of investment and economic activity in Portugal

The company incorporation process is step one of the D2 path. Once registered, you build your operational track record — invoices, employees, contracts — and then file for the visa. We cover the D2 pathway in full detail in our D2 Visa Guide →

Ready to Register Your Company?

We handle the whole process — structure advice, name approval, Empresa na Hora or Online registration, and all mandatory post-incorporation filings. You get a fully registered Portuguese company with all compliance squared away.

Company Incorporation — €800 Book a Free Call First