How is a digital nomad taxed in Portugal?
Spend 183 or more days in Portugal in a calendar year and you are generally tax resident on worldwide income. How the day count, a home, and the IFICI regime decide what a digital nomad owes.
Short answer: a digital nomad becomes Portuguese tax resident — and generally taxable on worldwide income — by spending 183 days or more in Portugal in a calendar year, or by keeping a home there that suggests you intend to stay. It is the 183-day rule applied to a calendar tax year, and Flags: Country Days Tracker is built to count those days for you.
The two ways you become resident
Portugal's tax year is the calendar year (1 January – 31 December), which makes the maths simpler than the UK's April-to-April split. You are treated as resident if either of these is true:
- You spend more than 183 days in Portugal in any 12-month period, counting any day you set foot in the country; or
- You spend fewer days but keep a home in a way that implies you mean to hold it as your habitual residence.
That second limb matters for nomads. Renting a Lisbon flat on a long lease while you hop around Europe can make you resident even if your raw day count stays under the line.
What residency means for your tax bill
Once resident, Portugal taxes your worldwide income on a progressive scale, with separate flat treatment for some investment income. Non-residents are taxed only on Portuguese-source income. We do not quote rates here — they change — but the principle is the one every nomad needs: residency is the switch that turns local income tax into worldwide income tax.
The old Non-Habitual Resident (NHR) regime, which gave new arrivals a decade of favourable rates, closed to new applicants at the end of 2023. Its successor, IFICI (often called "NHR 2.0"), is narrower and aimed at specific qualifying professions and activities. Whether you qualify is a question for a Portuguese adviser, not a day-counter.
The visa is not the tax answer
Portugal's Digital Nomad Visa (the D8) lets you live and work there legally, but holding it does not exempt you from tax. The visa decides whether you may stay; the 183-day count and your home decide whether Portugal taxes you. Treat them as separate questions.
If you are also threading the Schengen 90/180 limit while you settle in, see how to track tax residency days — the day counts feed two different rulebooks at once.
How Flags helps
Flags: Country Days Tracker reads the dates from your photos, on-device and offline, and counts your days in Portugal against its 183-day threshold and calendar tax year — while watching every other country you pass through, so an accidental second residency does not sneak up on you. It highlights a home or family tie for review rather than guessing your status.
Flags is an early-warning tool, not tax advice. It deliberately omits tax treaties, the IFICI/NHR regimes, and country-specific reliefs — confirm your position with a qualified Portuguese adviser.
- OECD: Tax residency rules by jurisdiction (AEOI portal) reviewed 2026-07-18
- Apple App Store: Flags: Country Days Tracker reviewed 2026-07-10
Flags rebuilds country day counts from photos you confirm and warns as you approach thresholds like the 183-day rule. It is not tax, legal or financial advice, and does not determine treaty positions or every jurisdiction-specific exception.