Discovery Call & Income Review
We review your employment type (salaried vs. freelance), income evidence, and timeline. We map out exactly which documents you need for your specific consulate.
1–2 weeksPortugal Residency Visa · Remote Work
For remote workers employed by foreign companies and freelancers whose clients are outside Portugal. Keep your job. Change your backdrop to the Atlantic.
Quick Eligibility Check
Portugal's digital nomad visa is one of the best in Europe — but the income bar is real. Here's who it fits and who it doesn't.
What You Need
These are the core documents required by consulates and AIMA. Employed remote workers and freelancers have slightly different evidence requirements — we guide you through both.
Employed: employer letter confirming remote status + employment contract. Freelancer: client contracts and invoices showing foreign-source income.
Statements showing regular deposits at or above €3,280/month. Freelancers with variable income can show a 6-month average — we advise on framing this correctly.
Biometric passport with at least 6 months validity beyond your planned stay. Some consulates require a specific number of blank pages.
From every country you've lived in for 12+ months over the last 5 years. Must be apostilled and translated into Portuguese if not in English.
Valid coverage in Portugal, active until you can enroll in the SNS after receiving your residency permit. We recommend plans from €600–€1,200/year.
A signed rental lease or property deed in Portugal. Plus your Portuguese NIF (tax number) — which we can obtain for you remotely before you travel.
Step by Step
From your first call to residency card in hand. We've done this dozens of times — we know exactly what each step takes.
We review your employment type (salaried vs. freelance), income evidence, and timeline. We map out exactly which documents you need for your specific consulate.
1–2 weeksWe guide you through gathering, apostilling, and translating your documents. We also obtain your NIF remotely and can assist with opening a Portuguese bank account before you fly.
2–4 weeksYou attend your D8 visa appointment at the Portuguese consulate in your home country. We prep you for the interview and review every document before you go in.
1–6 weeks waitYour D8 visa arrives. You fly to Portugal. You have 120 days from visa issuance to enter. Time to find your apartment, set up your workspace, and explore your new city.
Your timingWe book your AIMA appointment for your Portuguese residency permit. We prepare your full submission and handle any follow-up requests. This is often where people get stuck without a guide.
~1–3 monthsYour 1-year residency permit (renewable for 2 more years) is issued. You enroll in the SNS, get your full banking setup, and start the clock toward permanent residency and EU citizenship.
You're a residentTransparent Pricing
Every fee, upfront. No surprises. These are government fees plus our service — not cost of living or moving expenses.
Government fees above are paid directly to Portuguese authorities — we pass them through at cost, no markup. We'll give you a full personalised breakdown in your discovery call.
Common Questions
The D8 is for people whose work and income comes from outside Portugal — a foreign employer or foreign clients. You don't need to set up any business structure in Portugal. The D2 is for self-employed people who want to build a professional activity within Portugal's economy — serving Portuguese clients, operating as a registered freelancer (Recibos Verdes), or founding a company in Portugal. If your work is fully international, D8. If you're building a practice in Portugal, D2.
No — consulates understand that freelance income fluctuates. What they're looking for is a consistent average over 3–6 months of bank statements. One quiet month won't kill your application if the trend is clear and sustainable. We help you structure your income presentation for maximum clarity. Salaried remote workers have an easier time since their monthly deposits are identical.
Yes. You're free to change remote employers or freelance clients as long as your new work is still for non-Portuguese entities and your income stays above threshold. Portugal doesn't require you to notify AIMA of every employer change. Just keep documentation in case AIMA asks at permit renewal time.
The D8 is designed for income predominantly from non-Portuguese sources. An occasional small project with a Portuguese client is unlikely to be an issue. But if you're actively building a Portuguese clientele, taking on regular Portuguese contracts, or operating as a Portuguese-market professional, you're in D2 territory — and should plan accordingly.
The bank statement review looks at what actually hits your account — which is net. If your gross salary is €4,000 and taxes reduce it to €3,000 deposited, that's below threshold. Plan with your net take-home figure. For self-employed applicants, revenue is not the same as income — what you invoice is not what the consulate sees; what you bank is.
Yes. Your spouse and dependent children can join you under family reunification. The primary applicant's income must be sufficient to support the family — the requirement scales up for larger households. Each family member needs their own documentation package. We coordinate family applications together to streamline the process.
Ready to Start?
Book a free 20-minute call. We'll check your income, review your situation, and tell you exactly what the process looks like for you — before you commit to anything.
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