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how to challenge administrative silence in Portugal 2026

How to Challenge Administrative Silence in Portugal (2026): Step‑by‑step Process, Deadlines & Remedies

By Global Law Experts
– posted 36 minutes ago

When a Portuguese public authority fails to issue a decision within the statutory timeframe, the resulting silêncio administrativo, administrative silence, can stall construction permits, tax rulings, immigration applications and commercial licences indefinitely. Understanding how to challenge administrative silence in Portugal in 2026 is critical for any business, in‑house counsel or private applicant caught in this procedural limbo. The Código do Procedimento Administrativo (CPA), consolidated by Decreto‑Lei n. º 4/2015, establishes the general framework for decision deadlines and the legal consequences of non‑decision, while Lei Orgânica n. º 1/2026 has reinforced and clarified the 90‑day decision rule in several regulatory contexts.

This guide sets out every administrative appeal step, required document, cost estimate and judicial remedy available to applicants who face administrative silence in Portugal.

Overview of Administrative Silence and Who It Applies To

Administrative silence occurs when a public authority, a municipal council, AIMA (the immigration and asylum agency), the tax authority or any other body of the public administration, receives a complete application and fails to issue a decision within the legally prescribed period. Under the CPA, the default statutory deadline for concluding an administrative procedure is 90 days from the date the authority receives the complete file.

The consequences of silence depend on the type of procedure. Portuguese law distinguishes between deferimento tácito (tacit approval) and indeferimento tácito (tacit denial). Where a statute expressly provides that silence constitutes approval, the applicant may claim the requested act has been tacitly granted once the deadline lapses. In all other cases, once the 90‑day decision rule is breached, the applicant acquires the right to use judicial remedies to compel a decision.

The 2026 reforms have heightened awareness of these rules. Lei Orgânica n.º 1/2026, published in the Diário da República, imposes a 90‑day deadline for the government to publish implementing regulations in key areas including nationality. Industry observers expect this to create a cascade effect, tightening the practical enforcement of the administrative procedure timeline across agencies such as AIMA, local licensing authorities and the tax administration. Typical situations where administrative silence in Portugal becomes a live issue include building permits, environmental licences, residence-permit renewals, tax ruling requests and nationality applications.

Eligibility and Prerequisites

Before launching any judicial challenge, an applicant must confirm standing and satisfy several procedural prerequisites. The right to challenge administrative silence belongs to anyone who submitted a complete application, or who is directly and personally affected by the failure to decide. Third parties with a legally protected interest (for example, a competitor affected by non‑issuance of a competitor’s licence) may also have standing, though this requires specific legal analysis.

Confirming the “complete file” date

The statutory clock begins only once the authority holds a complete application. If the authority requested additional documents, the deadline restarts from the date those documents were provided. To establish the filing date, collect all protocol receipts, registered-mail delivery slips, email acknowledgements and any written confirmation from the agency. Without this evidence, the authority may dispute that the deadline has lapsed, undermining every subsequent remedy. It is also essential to verify whether any mandatory administrative remedy (such as a reclamação or recurso hierárquico) must be exhausted before judicial action is available in the specific sector concerned.

Step‑by‑Step Procedure to Challenge Administrative Silence

The following numbered process outlines the administrative appeal steps and judicial remedies for administrative silence available under Portuguese law. The timeline table below summarises each step, who takes it and the typical duration.

Step Who does it Typical duration
1. Confirm complete-file date and compute statutory deadline Applicant / counsel 0–1 day (gather submission receipts immediately)
2. Send formal request for an express decision Applicant / counsel → original authority Allow 7–15 days for administrative response
3. File administrative remedy (reclamação graciosa / recurso hierárquico) if available Applicant / counsel 15–30 days to file; agency response time varies
4. Request certidão of tacit deferment or formal statement of non‑decision Applicant / counsel → authority 7–30 days (depends on agency practice)
5. File judicial action (intimação para decidir or judicial review) in Tribunal Administrativo e Fiscal Applicant (through counsel) File within statutory limitation period; court proceedings typically 3–12 months
6. Apply for urgent interim relief (provisional measures / injunction) Applicant (through counsel) Can be filed concurrently; judge may rule in days to weeks

Step 1: Verify the filing date and compute the statutory deadline

Action: gather every receipt and calculate day‑count from the “complete file” date. Under the CPA, the 90‑day period runs in calendar days, but periods that end on a Sunday, public holiday or day when the authority is closed are extended to the next working day. Assemble all protocol receipts, registered-mail tracking confirmations, email timestamps and any written notice from the authority confirming completeness. If the authority requested supplementary information, recalculate the deadline from the date the last requested document was delivered. Record this date in writing, it anchors every subsequent step.

Step 2: Send a formal request for an express decision

Action: write to the competent authority demanding a decision. Before escalating, send a formal written request, by registered mail with acknowledgement of receipt, or through the authority’s electronic portal, expressly citing the statutory deadline and requesting an immediate decision. This communication serves two purposes: it places the authority on notice of its breach and creates contemporaneous evidence for any later judicial action. Where the procedure allows, this step may take the form of a reclamação graciosa (administrative complaint) addressed to the deciding authority, or a recurso hierárquico (hierarchical appeal) addressed to the superior authority. Allow 7–15 days for a response before proceeding further.

Step 3: Claim tacit deferment or obtain formal confirmation of non‑decision

Action: request a certidão de deferimento tácito from the authority. If the applicable statute provides that administrative silence produces tacit approval (deferimento tácito), the applicant may request a formal certificate, the certidão, confirming that the act has been tacitly granted. The authority is obliged to issue this certificate. In practice, obtaining it can take 7–30 days depending on the agency. If silence does not produce tacit approval, or if the authority refuses to issue the certidão, the applicant should request a formal written statement confirming that no decision has been issued. This statement becomes key evidence for judicial proceedings.

Applicants dealing with administrative law matters in Portugal should note that the availability of tacit deferment varies by sector, licensing and urban-planning permits are the most common areas where tacit approval applies.

Step 4: File judicial action, intimação para decidir or judicial review

Action: instruct a lawyer to file proceedings in the competent Tribunal Administrativo e Fiscal. Portuguese administrative-court procedure offers two principal judicial remedies for administrative silence. The first is the intimação para a emissão de um acto administrativo (also referred to as intimação para decidir), a fast-track procedure specifically designed to compel the authority to issue a decision. The second is a standard judicial review action (acção administrativa) seeking annulment of the tacit refusal or a declaration of the applicant’s right to a decision. A damages claim may accompany either action where the applicant can demonstrate financial loss caused by the delay.

Proceedings must be filed in the Tribunal Administrativo e Fiscal that is territorially competent, typically determined by the seat of the deciding authority. Representation by a lawyer (advogado) is mandatory in Portuguese administrative courts.

Step 5: Apply for emergency interim relief, injunction against administrative inaction

Action: request provisional measures or an urgent injunction to prevent irreparable harm. Where the delay is causing or threatens imminent, irreparable prejudice, for example, an expiring residence permit, a construction contract deadline or a tax penalty accruing, the applicant may seek urgent interim relief concurrently with or independently of the main judicial action. The applicant must demonstrate the periculum in mora (danger in delay) and the fumus boni iuris (arguable merit of the underlying claim). The court may order the authority to issue a provisional decision, suspend the harmful effects of inaction, or impose a coercive fine (sanção pecuniária compulsória) for each day of continued non‑compliance.

Judges in urgent proceedings can rule within days, making this an essential tool where the administrative silence deadline has passed and commercial or personal consequences are severe.

Required Documents and Information

Assembling a complete evidence pack before filing is critical. The table below lists the documents needed to file an appeal or judicial action challenging administrative silence in Portugal, together with notes on issuing authority, format and validity.

Document Notes
Proof of submission (protocol receipt / file number / email acknowledgement) Issued by the administrative authority, PDF or printed receipt with timestamp. Keep originals and scanned copies.
Complete application bundle copy Applicant’s file, full copy of every document submitted, with dates and checklists.
Power of attorney (procuração) Prepared by notary or lawyer. Required if counsel is filing. Must be legalised, apostilled or accompanied by EU eID verification as applicable.
Certidão or formal statement from authority Requested from the administrative authority, certified statement confirming non‑decision or tacit deferment. Essential evidence for judicial proceedings.
Identification / company documents Civil ID card or passport, NIF (tax identification number), company registration certificate (certidão permanente) for businesses, certified where required.
Proof of urgency / prejudice Contracts, financial statements, expiry notices, penalty assessments, any evidence demonstrating harm caused by the delay.
Correspondence record All emails, registered-mail receipts and delivery confirmations exchanged with the authority, proving attempts to obtain a decision.

For immigration and AIMA cases, additional documents may include the original visa or permit, travel records and proof of continued residence. For tax-ruling requests, include copies of the relevant tax returns and the specific questions posed to the tax authority. All foreign-language documents require certified Portuguese translations.

Timeline and Key Deadlines for Challenging Administrative Silence

The central administrative procedure timeline under the CPA sets a 90‑day default period for administrative decisions, running from the date the authority holds a complete file. Lei Orgânica n.º 1/2026 reinforces this principle by requiring the government to publish implementing regulations within 90 days in areas covered by the new nationality framework. Certain sectoral statutes impose shorter or longer deadlines, for example, some urban-planning procedures operate under a 45‑day or 60‑day rule, while complex environmental licensing may allow extensions.

Milestone Deadline / Time Span
Default statutory period for administrative decision (CPA) 90 calendar days from complete-file date
Formal request for express decision / administrative reminder Send immediately upon deadline lapse; allow 7–15 days for response
Reclamação graciosa / recurso hierárquico filing window Typically 15–30 days from the triggering event (check sectoral rules)
Judicial action filing (administrative courts) File after administrative silence is confirmed; statutory limitation depends on remedy chosen
Urgent interim relief / injunction File at any time concurrently with or before the main action; court may rule in days
Lei Orgânica n.º 1/2026, regulatory implementation deadline 90 days from publication of the law

Applicants should note that time limits for judicial action may vary depending on whether the applicant invokes tacit deferment, seeks to compel a decision, or challenges a tacit denial. The specific route determines the clock. Consulting a qualified administrative lawyer in Portugal before any deadline lapses is strongly recommended.

Costs, Fees and Tax Considerations

Challenging administrative silence involves both administrative and judicial costs. The table below provides indicative ranges; actual amounts depend on the complexity of the case, the court involved and the region. All figures exclude VAT unless stated otherwise.

Item Amount (indicative) Notes
Court filing fee (Tribunal Administrativo e Fiscal) €50 – €300 Varies by type of action and value of claim. Legal-aid exemptions may apply.
Lawyer retainer (administrative review only) €500 – €2,500 Depends on complexity; includes drafting administrative complaints and correspondence.
Lawyer retainer (urgent judicial action + injunction) €2,000 – €10,000 Higher range for complex emergency work; includes expedited hearings and evidence preparation.
Certidão / administrative certificates €0 – €50 Some authorities issue certificates at no cost; others charge a small fee.
Translations / notarisation / apostille €50 – €400 Depends on number of documents and languages involved.

If the court finds in the applicant’s favour, the authority may be ordered to reimburse court costs and, in some cases, pay damages. Professional fees paid to lawyers are generally not tax-deductible for individuals unless connected to income-producing activity, but businesses may treat them as deductible operating costs.

What Changes in 2026: The Administrative Silence Reforms

The April–May 2026 legislative package has brought significant attention to remedies for administrative silence. Lei Orgânica n.º 1/2026, published in the Diário da República, amended Portugal’s nationality framework and explicitly required the government to publish new implementing regulations within 90 days. Early indications suggest this legislative emphasis on the 90‑day decision rule is accelerating compliance expectations across other agencies.

The likely practical effect for businesses and applicants is twofold. First, authorities are under increased political and legal pressure to respect the statutory decision period. Second, where agencies such as AIMA handle high volumes of applications with known backlogs, the reinforced 90‑day framework strengthens the legal basis for judicial challenge. Sectoral rules, particularly in immigration, environmental licensing and tax, may impose different deadlines, but the CPA’s 90‑day default remains the baseline. Applicants pursuing nationality, visa or permit applications under the 2026 rules should monitor the Portugal country guide for updates as implementing regulations are published.

Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

  • Miscalculating the filing date. The clock starts from the “complete file” date, not the initial submission date. If the authority requested supplementary documents, recalculate from the date those were delivered.
  • Failing to collect a protocol receipt. Without a timestamped receipt, the authority can dispute that the deadline has lapsed. Always submit by registered mail or secure a portal receipt with a reference number.
  • Filing in the wrong court or forum. Administrative courts (Tribunais Administrativos e Fiscais), not civil courts, have jurisdiction. Filing in the wrong forum wastes time and may cause limitation periods to expire.
  • Neglecting mandatory administrative remedies. Some sectors require an internal administrative complaint or hierarchical appeal before judicial action is admissible. Skipping this step can result in the court dismissing the case.
  • Missing the urgent-relief window. If irreparable harm is imminent, the applicant must seek provisional measures immediately. Delay weakens the periculum in mora argument and may make the court reluctant to grant an injunction against administrative inaction.
  • Insufficient evidence of prejudice. Courts require concrete evidence of harm, financial loss, expired contracts, accruing penalties. Vague assertions are not enough to secure interim relief.
  • Attempting a damages claim prematurely. A standalone damages claim without first seeking to compel a decision or obtain judicial review is likely to be dismissed or substantially weakened.
  • Unclear or defective power of attorney. If the procuração is not properly legalised, apostilled or does not grant specific authority for administrative-court proceedings, the filing may be rejected.

Conclusion

Challenging administrative silence in Portugal in 2026 demands prompt, structured action. The CPA’s 90‑day decision rule and the reinforcements introduced by Lei Orgânica n.º 1/2026 provide applicants with clear legal grounds to compel public authorities to act, or to seek judicial remedies when they do not. The process runs from confirming the filing date and exhausting administrative remedies through to filing judicial proceedings and, where necessary, seeking emergency injunctive relief. Missing a single step or deadline can compromise the entire challenge. Applicants facing administrative silence should assemble their evidence pack promptly, verify the applicable sectoral deadline and instruct qualified counsel without delay.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

 

Sources

  1. Diário da República, Código do Procedimento Administrativo (Decreto‑Lei n.º 4/2015, consolidated)
  2. Diário da República, Lei Orgânica n.º 1/2026
  3. Supremo Tribunal Administrativo, Jurisprudence Repository (DGSI)
  4. Provedor de Justiça (Portuguese Ombudsman), Administrative Procedural Guidance
  5. DGPJ / Ministério da Justiça, Administrative Legislation Portal
  6. European Asylum Information Database (AIDA/ECRE), Portugal Regular Procedure

FAQs

What happens if the public administration does not decide within 90 days in Portugal?
Once 90 days elapse without a decision, the applicant may invoke the legal consequences set out in the CPA. If the applicable statute provides for deferimento tácito (tacit approval), the requested act is deemed granted and the applicant can request a certidão confirming this. If no tacit-approval provision exists, the silence is treated as a breach of the duty to decide, entitling the applicant to seek judicial remedies, including compelling the authority to act and claiming damages for delay.
The general statutory deadline under the CPA is 90 calendar days from the date the authority holds a complete application file. Some sectoral statutes impose shorter periods (45 or 60 days for certain urban-planning or licensing procedures) or permit extensions in complex cases. Lei Orgânica n.º 1/2026 reinforced the 90‑day standard in the nationality context and required new implementing regulations to be published within 90 days. Applicants should always verify the specific deadline applicable to their procedure.
The process follows a structured sequence: (1) confirm the filing date and calculate the deadline; (2) send a formal written request for an express decision; (3) file an administrative complaint or hierarchical appeal if required by sector; (4) request a certidão of tacit deferment or non-decision; (5) file judicial action (intimação para decidir or judicial review) in the competent Tribunal Administrativo e Fiscal; and (6) apply for urgent interim relief if irreparable harm is imminent. Each step has specific time limits, consult a specialist for your sector.
Yes. Portuguese administrative courts can grant provisional measures, including injunctions, to prevent irreparable harm while the main proceedings are pending. The applicant must demonstrate urgency (periculum in mora) and an arguable case on the merits (fumus boni iuris). An injunction against administrative inaction can be filed concurrently with the main judicial action or beforehand. Judges in urgent proceedings may rule within days.
Yes. Any person, including non-residents and foreign nationals, who has submitted an application to a Portuguese public authority has standing to challenge administrative silence. Foreign applicants must be represented by a Portuguese-qualified lawyer (advogado) before the administrative courts. Documents issued abroad will typically require apostille or consular legalisation and certified translation into Portuguese. The same procedural steps and deadlines apply regardless of the applicant’s nationality or residence status.
Missing a judicial-filing deadline can be fatal to the claim. Portuguese administrative-court procedure allows restoration of time (justo impedimento) only in strictly limited circumstances, such as hospitalisation or events beyond the applicant’s control. If the limitation period for challenging the silence expires, the applicant may lose the right to compel a decision through the courts. The best mitigation is to instruct a lawyer as soon as the administrative decision deadline passes, ensuring all judicial time limits are tracked and met.
Engage a lawyer as soon as the statutory decision deadline has passed, or earlier if you anticipate the authority will not decide in time. Early instruction is particularly important where urgent harm is foreseeable (expiring permits, accruing tax penalties, contractual deadlines), where the procedure involves sectoral rules with shorter deadlines, or where the evidence of prejudice is complex. Representation by a lawyer is mandatory for all proceedings in Portuguese administrative courts, so judicial action cannot proceed without one.
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How to Challenge Administrative Silence in Portugal (2026): Step‑by‑step Process, Deadlines & Remedies

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