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Retirement visas

Retiring to Portugal: the visa routes

The D7 visa is popular with retirees who have stable passive income (pension, rentals, investments).

A few things to line up early:

Visa rules change often — treat this as a starting point and confirm the latest official requirements before you plan.

Remember: buying a home and gaining the right to live there are usually separate steps. See how ownership works in Portugal, and what it costs to live there in our cost-of-retiring guide.

Tax as a resident of Portugal

The old NHR tax break has closed to new arrivals and its replacement (IFICI) does not cover pensions, so a retiree becoming resident now is generally taxed on pension and foreign income at standard progressive IRS rates up to 48%, subject to the UK-Portugal treaty; take advice before moving.

Healthcare and everyday life in Portugal

Portugal's public SNS gives legal residents low-cost universal care, and many expats add private insurance (roughly £40-100 a month depending on age) for faster appointments and English-speaking doctors; the Algarve and main cities have good private hospitals. Portugal is one of Europe's safest and most welcoming countries; English is widely spoken in expat and tourist areas, driving is on the right, and life is easy for British retirees.

Where retirees settle

The Algarve (Lagos, Tavira, Albufeira) for sunshine and a large British community, Lisbon and its coast (Cascais) for city life, the Silver Coast around Óbidos for quieter value, and Porto and the north for greener, cheaper living.

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Everything on Portugal

Cost of retiring in PortugalCan a foreigner buy property in Portugal?

Retirement visas in other countries