Portugal visa options for Italy passport holders
Tourist / short stay
Visa-free
Enter without a visa, usually for a set number of days.
Visa types & longer-stay routes for Portugal
Freedom of movement
No visa or residence permit needed
As a Italy (EU/EEA/Swiss) citizen you have full free-movement rights in Portugal: you can live, work, study and retire there indefinitely — no visa, no residence permit. You only register with the local authorities after about three months. The visa routes below are for non-EU/EEA/Swiss nationals; you don’t need them.
For reference, the routes Portugal offers non-EU/EEA/Swiss nationals:
- Tourist
Tourist visa (Schengen Type C)
Up to 90 days within any 180-day period
- Insurance
- Requiredfor visa-required nationals — Schengen travel cover, min €30,000
- Good for
- Tourism and short family visits
- Requirement
- Passport, return ticket, accommodation and proof of funds
- Business
Business visa (Schengen Type C)
Up to 90 days within any 180-day period
- Insurance
- Requiredfor visa-required nationals — €30,000 Schengen travel insurance
- Good for
- Short business trips (no local employment)
- Requirement
- Business invitation + proof of purpose; same short-stay visa as tourism
- Study
Student visa (D4, study/research)
Entry visa ~120 days → residence permit for the course duration
- Insurance
- Required— Schengen-standard cover (min €30,000); SNS access after arrival
- Good for
- Non-EU students, researchers and interns (12+ month programmes)
- Requirement
- Enrolment at an accredited institution + proof of means
- Most nomadsDigital nomad
Digital nomad visa (D8)
1-year temporary-stay option, or residence permit (2 years, then 3)
- Insurance
- Required— health cover (sources cite ≥ €30,000) for the initial period
- Good for
- Non-EU remote workers/freelancers earning from outside Portugal
- Requirement
- Remote income ≈ €3,680/month (4× minimum wage) + savings ≈ €11,040
- Residence
Work / entrepreneur visa (D3 / D2)
Entry visa ~4 months → residence permit (2 years, then 3)
- Insurance
- Requiredfor the visa; then register with the public SNS health system
- Good for
- Skilled employees (D3) or entrepreneurs and freelancers (D2)
- Requirement
- D3: qualified job + salary ~1.5× minimum wage; D2: viable business plan + funds
- Residence
Passive income / retirement visa (D7)
Entry visa ~4 months → residence permit (2 years, then 3); path to PR
- Insurance
- Requiredfor the visa; SNS access at the residence-permit stage
- Good for
- Retirees and people with stable passive income (pension, rent, dividends)
- Requirement
- Passive income ≥ the minimum wage (≈ €920/month) + accommodation
- Residence
Golden visa (investment residence, ARI)
Renewable 2-year permits; path to PR/citizenship
- Insurance
- Required— private health cover valid in Portugal until SNS eligibility
- Good for
- Investors wanting residency with a low minimum-stay obligation
- Requirement
- ≈ €500,000 into a qualifying investment fund (real-estate route removed)
In-depth, source-cited visa guides
Income figures track the 2026 minimum wage (€920/month) and change yearly. Portugal's Golden Visa no longer accepts real-estate investment (fund route ≈ €500k). A 2026 reform reportedly raised the citizenship residency requirement toward 10 years — verify the final law. Last checked: 2026-06 — confirm with a Portuguese consulate / AIMA.
Last verified June 2026
Visa-free isn’t insurance-free
Whatever route you take into Portugal, your entry stamp never includes health cover. Many longer-stay visas also require proof of insurance before they’re granted. That part is on you — and it’s what we actually do.
Italy → Portugal: frequently asked
- Do Italy passport holders need a visa to visit Portugal?
- No. As a Italy (EU/EEA/Swiss) citizen you have freedom of movement in Portugal and need no visa for any length of stay.
- Can a Italy passport holder live or work long-term in Portugal?
- Yes — under EU/EEA/Swiss free movement you can live, work and study in Portugal indefinitely with no visa or residence permit.
- Do I need travel insurance for Portugal?
- Entry to Portugal never includes health cover, so travel medical insurance is strongly recommended. Several Portugal visas also require proof of insurance before they're granted.
Last updated
Visa rules can change at short notice and depend on your purpose of travel, length of stay and onward tickets. Always confirm with the destination’s embassy or the IATA Travel Centre before you book. Visa-free entry never includes travel health insurance. That’s still on you.