The Portuguese Golden Visa – what’s changed, how long you have to apply, and which investment routes make the most sense.
Current status
Portugal has announced that the Golden Visa program will be closed, but the law that will end it has not yet been enacted. The government expects the new legislation to be approved around the end of June 2026. Applications submitted before that cutoff should still be processed under the existing rules.
Key timing risks
- The exact date of the legal change is still uncertain; “end of June” is an estimate.
- Processing times for Golden Visa applications are already long—typically 12–24 months from submission to approval.
- If the law is enacted earlier than expected, any applications still pending could be rejected.
Steps required for any Golden Visa application
- Choose an eligible investment (fund, real‑estate, or other).
- Obtain a Portuguese tax number (NIF).
- Open a Portuguese bank account.
- Complete anti‑money‑laundering (AML) checks and obtain a criminal‑record certificate (and, if needed, have it legalized).
- Submit the investment documentation and the visa application.
Each of these steps can cause delays, so the overall timeline can easily exceed a year.
Investment options and their trade‑offs
Why Madeira may be advantageous Citizenship timeline Practical considerations before applying Bottom line
Option
Minimum investment
Liquidity
Typical return
Main risk
Qualified investment fund
€500,000
Funds are locked for 7 years
~5 % per year (average)
Money is illiquid; if the visa is denied you cannot recover the capital until the lock‑up ends.
Reduced‑value fund (post‑increase)
€280,000
Funds are locked for 7 years
Often negative (overpriced assets)
Same illiquidity as above, but with a lower capital outlay; potential for loss of principal.
Real‑estate (mainland)
€500,000 (or €350,000 in low‑density areas)
Property can be sold, but market may be slow
Market‑dependent; no guaranteed yield
Long sale process; regional restrictions (e.g., cannot buy in Porto, Lisbon, Algarve).
Real‑estate in Madeira
€500,000 (or €350,000)
Property is more liquid than fund investments
Market‑aligned price; potential for appreciation
Requires careful location choice; still subject to market risk.
The Portuguese Golden Visa remains open for applications until the new law is enacted, likely around June 2026. Applicants must act promptly, understand the lengthy processing times, and carefully weigh the liquidity and return prospects of each investment option—especially considering the faster processing available through Madeira. The path to citizenship is long and uncertain, so realistic expectations and thorough risk assessment are essential.





