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Family Lawyers Portugal 2026: Lei 61/2025, Reunification, Sponsorship & Deadlines

By Global Law Experts
– posted 34 minutes ago

Last reviewed: 10 May 2026. Immigration rules in Portugal are evolving rapidly, always verify applicability with a qualified lawyer before acting.

Lei n.º 61/2025 entered into force in October 2025 and fundamentally rewrote the rules that family lawyers in Portugal use to advise sponsors, foreign spouses and cohabiting partners on family reunification. The statute introduced longer minimum-residence periods for sponsors, tightened evidentiary requirements for cohabitation, changed the filing route for family members already present in the country, and, according to widely circulated reports, extended the residence period required for naturalisation. A transitional regime allowed applicants who met the previous criteria to file under the old rules, but that window closed around 20–21 April 2026, making every pending case time-critical.

⚠ Urgent, Transitional Deadline (April 20–21, 2026): The transitional regime under Lei n.º 61/2025 permitted applications filed under the prior, more permissive rules. Industry observers confirm that window closed around 20–21 April 2026. If you submitted before that date and have not yet received a decision, your application should still be assessed under the old criteria. If you have not yet filed, the new requirements now apply in full. Contact a qualified family lawyer immediately to assess your options.

What Is Lei n.º 61/2025? Quick Legal Summary

Lei n.º 61/2025, published in the Diário da República, is the primary statute governing the current family reunification Portugal 2026 framework. It amended the existing foreigners’ law (Lei de Estrangeiros) and related regulations, replacing several provisions that had been in force since 2007 with tighter requirements across three core areas.

Key Changes at a Glance

Area of Change Pre-October 2025 Rule Under Lei n.º 61/2025
Sponsor residence period Generally 1 year of legal residence for most permit types Extended minimum periods, notably to 2 years for D7 (passive income) holders before they may sponsor most family members
Cohabitation evidence period Cohabitation recognised broadly; shorter evidentiary periods accepted Reduced waiting period (to 15 months) available only where spouse/partner cohabited with the sponsor in Portugal for at least 18 months prior to entry
In-country filing route Family members present in Portugal could apply locally in many cases Post-transitional regime: consular filing generally required unless family member already holds valid residency or meets specific in-country criteria

These amendments reflect a broader tightening of sponsorship rules in Portugal. The statutory text, available on dre.pt, should be consulted for the precise article numbers applicable to each permit category. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs visa guidance portal provides corresponding procedural updates for consular applications.

Who Can Sponsor Under the 2026 Family Reunification Portugal Rules?

Not every resident has the same sponsorship pathway. Lei n.º 61/2025 distinguishes between sponsor categories and imposes different minimum-residence requirements for each. Understanding where you fall in this framework is the first decision any family lawyer in Portugal will help you make.

Sponsor Decision Flow

  • Step 1: Confirm your current immigration status, Portuguese citizen, EU/EEA national, or third-country national (and which permit type).
  • Step 2: Calculate your continuous legal residence in Portugal from the date of permit issuance.
  • Step 3: Match your status and residence duration against the table below.
  • Step 4: If eligible, assemble the required evidence dossier. If not yet eligible, calculate the earliest date you will qualify.

Sponsorship Rules by Permit Type

Sponsor Category Minimum Residence Before Sponsoring Notes
Portuguese citizen None Constitutional right to family life; standard documentation still required
EU/EEA national with registration certificate None (but must hold valid registration) EU free-movement rules apply; evidence of genuine residence may be checked
D7 visa (passive income) holder 2 years of legal residence Significant change under Lei n.º 61/2025; limited exemptions for spouses who cohabited 18+ months prior
D2 visa (entrepreneur) holder Subject to permit-specific conditions Check statutory text for precise thresholds; broadly aligned with D7 changes
Work-permit holder (employment visa) Generally 1–2 years depending on contract type Permanent contract holders may benefit from shorter periods, verify with counsel

D7 Visa Family Reunification, the Major Shift

The D7 visa category has attracted significant expatriate interest in Portugal, and the extension of the sponsorship waiting period to two years represents one of the most consequential changes for foreign residents. Early indications suggest that AIMA (the immigration agency that replaced SEF) is applying this requirement strictly for all new applications filed after the transitional deadline.

Where and When to Apply, In-Country vs Consular (Transitional Provisions)

One of the most common questions family lawyers in Portugal now field is whether a spouse or partner already physically present in Portugal can still apply from inside the country. The answer depends entirely on timing and status.

The Transitional Window (Now Closed)

Lei n.º 61/2025 included transitional provisions permitting applicants who entered Portugal legally and were already present in the country to submit family reunification residence permit applications directly to AIMA, without first obtaining a consular visa, provided the application was filed before the transitional deadline of approximately 20–21 April 2026. This allowed in-country joint AIMA appointments under the prior, more permissive regime.

Post-Transition: Filing Routes After April 21, 2026

  • Family member abroad: Must apply for a D6 (family reunification) visa at the Portuguese consulate in their country of residence. The sponsor in Portugal initiates the process by filing a pedido de reagrupamento familiar with AIMA.
  • Family member in Portugal with valid residency: May apply for a change of status or renewal through AIMA directly, without a consular step.
  • Family member in Portugal without valid residency: Under the new rules, this individual generally must leave Portugal and apply through a consulate unless a narrow exception applies (e.g., pending asylum claim, minor child).

Practical Filing Sequence

  1. Sponsor gathers and legalises all required documents (see checklist below).
  2. Sponsor submits the reunification request to AIMA (online portal or in-person appointment).
  3. Upon AIMA pre-approval or notification, the family member applies for a D6 national visa at the competent consulate.
  4. Consulate issues the visa (typical processing: 2–8 weeks).
  5. Family member enters Portugal and attends an AIMA appointment for residence permit issuance (30–90 days).

For detailed guidance on the family reunification Portugal 2026 procedure, including appointment scheduling, see our companion guide.

Evidence and Eligibility Checklist for Family Reunification Portugal 2026

Incomplete dossiers are the single most common reason for delays and refusals. The checklist below covers the core categories of evidence that AIMA and Portuguese consulates expect to see. All foreign-language documents must be translated into Portuguese by a certified translator and, depending on the issuing country, legalised with an apostille or consular authentication.

Proof of Relationship

  • Married spouses: Marriage certificate, if issued abroad, apostilled and translated. If the marriage was registered in Portugal, obtain a certidão de casamento from the Civil Registry (Conservatória).
  • De facto (cohabiting) partners: A declaração de união de facto issued by the Junta de Freguesia confirming at least two years of cohabitation, supported by:
  • Joint rental or mortgage contracts
  • Shared utility bills (electricity, water, internet) at the same address
  • Joint bank account statements
  • Portuguese joint tax returns (IRS filed jointly or listing the same fiscal address)
  • Affidavits from two witnesses confirming the cohabitation period in Portugal
  • Dated photographs and travel records showing the couple together over time
  • Children’s birth certificates: Apostilled and translated. For children born outside marriage, see guidance on registration of births for children conceived outside marriage.

Financial Means and Accommodation

  • Proof of income: Employment contract or proof of passive income (D7 holders), tax returns for the last two fiscal years, bank statements showing regular income deposits.
  • Accommodation: Rental agreement or property deed; the property must meet minimum habitability standards. Some municipalities require a atestado de residência from the Junta de Freguesia.
  • Financial threshold: The sponsor must demonstrate sufficient means to support the family member without recourse to the Portuguese social security system. The practical threshold is generally benchmarked to the national minimum wage per additional dependant, confirm the current figure with your lawyer.

Criminal Record and Health Checks

  • Criminal record certificate: From the applicant’s country of nationality and any country of residence in the past year. Apostilled and translated.
  • Portuguese criminal record: Obtainable online from the Ministry of Justice (Certificado de Registo Criminal).
  • Health insurance or SNS enrolment: Evidence that the family member will have health coverage, private insurance policy or pending SNS (National Health Service) registration.

Children and Dependants, Additional Evidence

  • Minor children (under 18): Birth certificate, passport, authorisation from the non-accompanying parent (if applicable, notarised consent or court order).
  • Adult dependants: Evidence of dependency (financial transfers, medical reports for incapacitated adults), plus proof that no other family member in the country of origin can provide care.
  • School-age children: Enrolment confirmation from a Portuguese school may strengthen the application.

Industry observers expect AIMA to scrutinise the cohabitation period in Portugal more closely under the new rules, particularly for unmarried partners. Assembling a robust, well-indexed evidence bundle from the outset is strongly recommended.

D7 Sponsorship Rules and Common Pitfalls

The D7 visa, Portugal’s popular passive-income residence route, has seen the most significant tightening of sponsorship rules under Lei n.º 61/2025. Understanding these specific pitfalls can mean the difference between approval and a costly refusal.

Two-Year Residence Requirement

D7 holders must now complete two full years of legal residence in Portugal before sponsoring most family members. The clock starts from the date of issuance of the initial residence permit, not from the date of entry into Portugal or the date the visa was granted. Absences from Portugal during this period may interrupt the count if they exceed the limits set for maintaining tax residency.

Passive Income Threshold Issues

The D7 sponsor must demonstrate that their passive income is sufficient to support both themselves and any family members they wish to bring. The likely practical effect is that sponsors relying on borderline income levels will need to show a higher total to cover additional dependants. Bank statements, pension certificates and investment income records should all be current and translated.

Cohabitation Evidence for Unmarried Partners

Under Lei n.º 61/2025, spouses or partners who cohabited with the D7 holder in Portugal for at least 18 months before the family member’s entry may benefit from a reduced waiting period of 15 months rather than the standard two years. However, proving this cohabitation period requires the rigorous evidence bundle described above, and the 18-month threshold is measured strictly.

Common Refusal Grounds and Responses

  • Incomplete documentation: The most frequent issue. Always submit a complete dossier with certified translations and apostilles.
  • Insufficient financial means: Provide updated bank statements and income documentation covering the most recent quarter.
  • Gaps in residence: If you spent extended time outside Portugal, prepare an explanation and evidence that your fiscal and residential centre remained in Portugal.
  • Relationship credibility concerns: Particularly for recent marriages, provide extensive evidence of genuine relationship (communication records, joint travel, shared financial commitments).

If a D7 visa family reunification application is refused, the applicant has the right to an administrative appeal. A family lawyer can draft the appeal, identify missing evidence, and, where appropriate, pursue judicial review.

Timelines, Fees and Likely Processing Times

Processing times for family reunification in Portugal 2026 vary significantly depending on the filing route, the consulate’s backlog, and the completeness of the application dossier.

Application Type Typical Processing Time Approximate Fee Range
D6 consular visa (family reunification) 2–8 weeks from submission €90–€150 (consular fee varies by post)
AIMA residence permit issuance 30–90 days from appointment €50–€80 (permit issuance fee)
In-country change of status (where still permitted) 60–120 days depending on backlog €50–€80

Tips to reduce processing time: Submit a complete, well-organised dossier from the outset. Register your marriage in Portugal before filing. Use a lawyer to pre-check all translations and apostilles. Respond to any AIMA or consulate information requests within the stated deadline, late responses restart the clock.

Impact on Naturalisation and Spouse Residency

Alongside family reunification changes, widely circulated reports indicate that Portugal’s naturalisation requirements have also been tightened, with the legal residence period reportedly extended from five years to ten years for standard applications. This is relevant to foreign spouses who may have planned to apply for Portuguese nationality based on the earlier five-year threshold.

Important note: The precise statutory basis for this change should be verified against the official nationality law amendments published in the Diário da República. For an overview of related developments, including Golden Visa programme changes, see our analysis of Portugal citizenship changes 2026.

Practical Implications for Spouses

  • Longer planning horizon: Spouses who previously expected to naturalise after five years of residence may now need to plan for a decade-long residency pathway.
  • Permanent residency as an interim step: Applying for a permanent residence permit (available after five years of legal residence) remains critical, it provides stability while the naturalisation clock continues.
  • Evidence preservation: Keep continuous records of residence, tax filings, language-course attendance (A2 Portuguese is typically required), and community integration, all of which support a future naturalisation application.
  • Spouses of Portuguese citizens: May still benefit from a shorter naturalisation pathway (typically three years of marriage combined with genuine connection to Portugal), but the documentary requirements are exacting.

Early indications suggest that the administrative backlog at AIMA and the Civil Registry may further extend practical timelines beyond the statutory minimums, making proactive evidence collection essential.

How Family Lawyers in Portugal Help, Services and Tactical Advantages

Given the complexity of the 2026 regime, engaging qualified family lawyers in Portugal provides tangible advantages at every stage:

  • Document audit and dossier assembly: Pre-submission review of all certificates, translations, apostilles and evidence bundles to eliminate the most common refusal grounds.
  • Translation and legalisation coordination: Managing certified translation, notarisation and apostille workflows across multiple countries.
  • AIMA and consular representation: Attending appointments on behalf of or alongside clients, presenting legal arguments where discretionary decisions are involved.
  • Appeals and judicial review: Drafting administrative appeals against refusals and, where necessary, filing for judicial review before the Administrative Courts.
  • Naturalisation strategy: Long-term planning for nationality applications, including evidence timelines and language-certification scheduling.
  • Urgency applications: Where humanitarian or family-unity grounds exist, preparing submissions for expedited processing.

To find a qualified practitioner, consult the Global Law Experts lawyer directory, which lists vetted family and immigration lawyers across Portugal.

Key Legislative Timeline

Date / Event What Changed Practical Effect for Sponsors
October 2025 Lei n.º 61/2025 enters into force New residence, cohabitation and sponsorship rules apply to all applications filed from this date; transitional regime begins for pending and in-progress cases.
~20 April 2026 Transitional window closes for applications under prior regime Applicants who met the earlier, more permissive criteria needed to submit by this date. Applications filed before the deadline should be assessed under old rules.
~21 April 2026 onward New rules fully applied in practice All new applications processed exclusively under Lei n.º 61/2025. Tighter residency, cohabitation and consular-filing requirements apply across all permit categories.

Conclusion, Act Now on Family Reunification Portugal 2026

The 2026 family reunification landscape in Portugal is materially different from what it was just twelve months ago. Lei n.º 61/2025 has lengthened waiting periods, tightened evidentiary standards, and redirected most applicants to the consular filing route now that the transitional window has closed. For sponsors holding D7 visas, the two-year residence requirement represents a significant planning constraint. For spouses considering naturalisation, the reported extension to ten years demands a longer-term strategy built on continuous evidence preservation and proactive legal advice.

The single most effective step any sponsor or foreign spouse can take right now is to consult experienced family lawyers in Portugal who understand both the statutory framework and AIMA’s evolving administrative practice. Whether your priority is assembling an evidence dossier, navigating a refusal appeal, or planning a naturalisation timeline, qualified legal counsel ensures that no deadline is missed and no document is overlooked.

This article provides general information about Portuguese family reunification law as of May 2026. It does not constitute legal advice. Immigration rules change frequently, and individual circumstances vary. Contact a qualified family lawyer to obtain advice specific to your situation.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Helena Palhota Simões at Helena Palhota Simões – Sociedade de Advogados, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Diário da República, Lei n.º 61/2025 (official statute text)
  2. Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Vistos / National Visas: Family Reunification
  3. Lamares Capela, Family Reunification in Portugal in 2026: What Has Changed?
  4. Relocate.world, Stricter Family Reunification Rules for Portugal’s D7 Visa Holders
  5. Visas.pt, Portugal Family Reunification Rules 2026
  6. Global Law Experts, Family Reunification Portugal 2026 Guide

FAQs

What are the new rules of family reunification in Portugal for 2026?
Lei n.º 61/2025, effective since October 2025, tightens residence and cohabitation requirements for sponsors, changes the filing route (generally requiring consular applications after the transitional deadline), and imposes longer waiting periods, notably two years for D7 holders. Sponsors should check the specific rules for their permit type and review the full evidence checklist.
D7 (passive income) visa holders now face a two-year minimum legal-residence requirement before they can sponsor most family members. A reduced period of 15 months is available where the spouse or partner cohabited with the sponsor in Portugal for at least 18 months prior to the family member’s entry. The transitional window for filing under the old rules closed around 20–21 April 2026.
Transitional provisions allowed certain in-country filings until mid-April 2026. After that date, family members without valid residency in Portugal must generally apply for a D6 visa at a Portuguese consulate abroad. Those already holding a valid residence permit may still apply for a change of status through AIMA.
Widely circulated reports indicate the standard residence requirement for naturalisation has been extended to ten years. Spouses of Portuguese citizens may still qualify under a shorter pathway (typically three years of marriage combined with genuine connection to Portugal). Applicants should verify the current statutory requirements against the official text in the Diário da República.
Processing varies by route: consular D6 visa issuance typically takes 2–8 weeks from submission; AIMA residence permit issuance commonly takes 30–90 days from the in-person appointment. Complete, well-organised dossiers experience shorter processing times.
Accepted evidence includes joint rental or mortgage contracts, shared utility bills, joint bank account statements, Portuguese joint tax returns, children’s school enrolment records, dated photographs, and sworn affidavits from third-party witnesses, all translated into Portuguese and legalised as required.
Request the written reasons for refusal promptly. Consult a family or immigration lawyer to assess whether an administrative appeal (to AIMA) or re-submission with additional evidence is the best strategy. Where administrative remedies are exhausted, judicial review before the Administrative Courts may be available.
A foreign spouse who entered on a visa that authorises employment, or who holds a pending residence application under a permit category allowing work, may be permitted to work. Working without proper authorisation is illegal and may jeopardise both the work and the reunification application. Confirm your specific entitlements with the immigration authority or qualified counsel.
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Family Lawyers Portugal 2026: Lei 61/2025, Reunification, Sponsorship & Deadlines

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