Our Expert in Portugal
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Last updated: 15 May 2026
Portugal’s 2026 public administration reform package has reshaped the way suppliers interact with contracting authorities, and the changes reach far beyond procedural paperwork. For any business that sells goods or services to Portuguese public bodies, the intersection of updated procurement rules and evolving tax requirements now creates a new layer of compliance obligations around public procurement tax Portugal. Mandatory e-invoicing protocols, tighter documentation at the award stage, refreshed VAT mapping requirements and reinforced audit powers of the Tribunal de Contas (Court of Auditors) mean that finance teams, procurement managers and in-house counsel must act quickly to avoid payment hold-ups and penalties.
This guide delivers a step-by-step compliance playbook, covering every stage from tender to final invoice, designed specifically for the suppliers who need to adapt now.
Before diving into the legal detail, here is a practical snapshot of the immediate actions every supplier to a Portuguese public body should prioritise. Treat this as your compliance triage list.
The sections that follow unpack each obligation in detail, with practical checklists and worked examples.
Portugal’s 2026 public administration reform 2026 package builds on the existing framework of the Código dos Contratos Públicos (Public Contracts Code) and introduces amendments aimed at accelerating digitalisation, strengthening transparency and aligning national procurement practice with evolving EU Directives. The reforms consolidate changes that had been phased in incrementally since late 2025, with full operational effectiveness across all contracting authorities as of early 2026.
The most consequential shifts for suppliers relate to three areas: e-procurement, documentation centralisation and threshold adjustments.
Running in parallel with these procurement process changes, the Autoridade Tributária e Aduaneira has reinforced requirements around certified invoicing software, the ATCUD validation code and electronic invoicing for transactions with public bodies. The practical effect is that tax compliance for suppliers is no longer just a back-office function, it directly determines whether a supplier’s invoice will be accepted and paid by the contracting authority. Non-compliant invoices are now more likely to trigger automated rejection, payment suspension or referral for audit.
| Reform element | Effective timing | Supplier impact |
|---|---|---|
| Mandatory e-procurement (all thresholds) | Phased 2025 – fully operational 2026 | Paper bids no longer accepted; electronic platform registration required |
| Portal BASE publication requirements expanded | 2026 | Suppliers must verify contract data published by contracting authority |
| EU procurement threshold adjustments | Per Commission Delegated Regulation cycles | Determines which procedure applies; impacts documentation burden |
| ATCUD / QR code mandatory on all invoices | Reinforced enforcement from 2026 | Invoices lacking ATCUD may be rejected by contracting authority |
| Enhanced Court of Auditors oversight | 2026 onwards | Higher probability of ex-post audit on procurement transactions |
Supplies of goods and services to Portuguese public bodies are subject to VAT under the general rules of the Código do IVA (Portuguese VAT Code). The standard VAT rate in mainland Portugal is 23%. An intermediate rate of 13% applies to certain food products, beverages and agricultural inputs, while a reduced rate of 6% covers essential items such as basic foodstuffs, pharmaceutical products and certain publications. The autonomous regions of the Azores and Madeira apply lower corresponding rates.
Suppliers should note that the fact a buyer is a public body does not, by itself, exempt the transaction from VAT. VAT exemptions apply only where the supply falls within a specific exemption category under the Portuguese VAT Code, for example, certain health, education or social services where the supplier meets qualifying conditions. Where a supplier incorrectly omits VAT on an invoice to a public entity, both the supplier and the contracting authority face compliance exposure.
Input VAT incurred in fulfilling a public contract is generally recoverable through the normal deduction mechanism, provided the supplier is registered for VAT and the expenses relate to taxable supplies. However, mixed-use scenarios, where a supplier provides both exempt and taxable supplies, require apportionment calculations that must be documented and defensible under audit.
Where a Portuguese public body pays a non-resident supplier for services performed in Portugal, withholding tax may apply under the Código do IRC (Corporate Income Tax Code). The standard withholding rate on services paid to non-residents is 25%, subject to reduction under an applicable double taxation agreement. For resident suppliers, withholding applies in specific circumstances, notably where the supplier is a sole trader (empresário em nome individual) providing professional services.
Contracting authorities are generally responsible for withholding and remitting the tax. Suppliers should verify the withholding treatment on each contract and ensure their invoices clearly state any applicable withholding reference, enabling the contracting authority to process payment correctly.
Under the rules enforced by the Autoridade Tributária, every invoice issued to a contracting authority must include mandatory data items prescribed by Portuguese invoicing legislation. The ATCUD (Código Único de Documento), a unique alphanumeric code, and a QR code must appear on the face of the invoice. Invoices must be generated through certified invoicing software approved by the Tax Authority.
Suppliers are required to report invoicing data electronically to the Tax Authority, typically via the e-Fatura system accessible through the Portal das Finanças. Electronic archiving of invoices and supporting documents must be maintained for the statutory retention period.
Example 1, Resident SME supplying IT equipment: A Lisbon-based SME wins a direct-award contract to supply laptops to a municipal authority. The supplier issues a VAT invoice at 23%, includes the ATCUD and QR code, reports the invoice via e-Fatura and archives the delivery note and purchase order digitally. Payment proceeds without delay.
Example 2, Non-resident supplier providing consulting services: A Spanish consultancy is engaged by a Portuguese ministry under an open procedure. The consultancy must determine whether it needs a Portuguese VAT registration or whether the reverse-charge mechanism applies. It must also account for potential withholding tax at 25% (or a reduced treaty rate) and ensure its invoice references the correct withholding provisions.
| Rate category | Mainland Portugal | Azores | Madeira |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard rate | 23% | 16% | 22% |
| Intermediate rate | 13% | 9% | 12% |
| Reduced rate | 6% | 4% | 5% |
| Entity type | Key reporting / invoicing obligation under 2026 reforms | Practical note / timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Portuguese VAT-registered supplier (resident) | Standard VAT invoicing; subject to e-invoicing and archiving; must produce tax clearance and social security certificates at award stage | Update invoicing template; ensure VAT mapping in ERP within 30 days |
| Non-resident supplier to Portuguese contracting authority | VAT place-of-supply rules apply; potential need for Portuguese VAT registration or reverse-charge handling; withholding tax considerations | Verify VAT registration requirements prior to invoicing; obtain tax representative if needed |
| Small supplier / micro-enterprise | Simplified invoicing allowed where conditions are met, but procurement documentation still required for qualification | Adopt compliance checklist; store documentation for statutory retention period |
The reformed procurement documentation Portugal requirements mean that contracting authorities now conduct more rigorous up-front verification of suppliers. At the tender or qualification stage, suppliers should be prepared to present the following:
As noted on the Portal Gov.pt public procurement participation page, EU/EEA nationals and companies have equal access to Portuguese public contracts, but must still satisfy national documentation requirements.
Once a contract is awarded, suppliers must maintain complete records of all transactional documentation, including purchase orders, delivery notes, acceptance certificates, invoices, credit notes and correspondence with the contracting authority. Portuguese tax law generally requires retention of invoicing and accounting records for a minimum period (typically aligned with the statutory limitation period for tax assessments). Procurement-specific documents may need to be retained for longer periods where the contract involves EU-funded programmes or is subject to Court of Auditors review.
Industry observers expect that the reinforced oversight powers given to the Court of Auditors under the 2026 reforms will increase the frequency of document requests directed at suppliers, even after contract completion.
All electronic submissions, bids, qualification documents and contract acceptances, must be authenticated with qualified electronic signatures recognised under Portugal’s digital identity framework. Suppliers should verify that their digital certificates are current and compatible with the certified e-procurement platforms.
Getting the supplier invoicing public contracts process right means following a disciplined sequence. Here is the recommended workflow:
Use this as a template audit tool every time your finance team issues an invoice to a Portuguese public body:
| Invoice field | Required? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Supplier name, address and NIF | Yes | Must match certified invoicing software registration |
| Contracting authority name, address and NIF | Yes | Verify NIF against Portal BASE award record |
| Invoice number (sequential, unique) | Yes | Generated by certified software |
| Invoice date | Yes | Must not precede goods delivery / service completion |
| ATCUD (Código Único de Documento) | Yes | Unique document code assigned by Tax Authority series |
| QR code | Yes | Machine-readable; generated by certified software |
| Description of goods / services | Yes | Must match contract scope and purchase order |
| Quantity and unit price | Yes | Consistent with contract pricing schedule |
| Applicable VAT rate and amount | Yes | Standard 23%, intermediate 13% or reduced 6% (mainland) |
| Total amount (net and gross) | Yes | Net + VAT = gross; show each separately |
| Withholding tax reference (if applicable) | Conditional | Include legal basis and rate where withholding applies |
| Contract / purchase order reference number | Recommended | Speeds payment processing and audit trail |
| Bank details for payment | Recommended | IBAN and SWIFT/BIC |
Small and medium-sized enterprises face the same substantive obligations under the public procurement tax Portugal framework as larger companies, but often lack dedicated compliance teams. The good news is that most of the required changes can be implemented at low cost with the right prioritisation.
Early indications suggest that SMEs that proactively implement these steps experience significantly fewer payment delays on public contracts compared to those that wait for individual contracting authorities to flag non-compliance.
The 2026 reforms have strengthened audit oversight in public procurement Portugal through two main channels: enhanced powers for the Tribunal de Contas (Court of Auditors) to conduct ex-post reviews of public contracts, and increased use of automated cross-referencing by the Autoridade Tributária between e-Fatura data and procurement records published on Portal BASE.
The most common triggers for a supplier-facing audit or inquiry are likely to include:
Penalties for non-compliant invoicing under Portuguese tax law include fixed fines for failure to issue invoices through certified software, additional assessments for undeclared or incorrectly declared VAT, and default interest on late tax payments. In serious cases, such as fraudulent invoicing or deliberate tax evasion, criminal sanctions may apply.
On the procurement side, suppliers found to have provided false declarations, fraudulent certificates or to have committed tax offences may face debarment from future public contracts under the exclusion grounds of the Public Contracts Code. The likely practical effect of the 2026 oversight reforms is that debarment decisions will be more consistently enforced across contracting authorities than in previous years.
The following phased action plan helps procurement managers and finance teams organise their compliance response:
| Phase | Timeframe | Key actions |
|---|---|---|
| Immediate | Within 30 days | Audit all invoice templates for ATCUD/QR compliance; confirm Portal BASE registration; renew tax clearance and social security certificates; brief finance team on mandatory invoice fields |
| Short-term | 30 – 90 days | Update ERP/invoicing software to certified version; establish digital archiving protocol; appoint compliance owner; review existing public contracts for documentation gaps |
| Medium-term | 3 – 6 months | Conduct internal audit of all active public contracts; reconcile e-Fatura submissions against accounting records; train new staff on procurement compliance procedures |
| Ongoing | 6 – 12 months and beyond | Monitor regulatory updates via Portal Gov.pt and Portal das Finanças; review EU procurement threshold publications; refresh certificates ahead of expiry; conduct annual compliance review |
The convergence of Portugal’s 2026 public administration reform and reinforced tax enforcement requirements has created a compliance environment where suppliers cannot afford to operate on autopilot. The core message is straightforward: update your invoicing systems, confirm your documentation is complete and current, understand the VAT and withholding obligations specific to your contracts and prepare for a higher probability of audit. Suppliers that take proactive steps, particularly around ATCUD compliance, e-Fatura reporting and certificate management, will be well-positioned to continue winning and executing public contracts without interruption.
For suppliers with cross-border operations or complex contract structures, specialist guidance from a practitioner experienced in public procurement tax Portugal and administrative law Portugal is strongly recommended. Businesses seeking expert support can search the Global Law Experts lawyer directory for qualified professionals in Portugal.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Helena Lopes Xavier at HALX Advogados, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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