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Nomads & Communities
11JUL

Portugal counts files, lawyers count the wait

3 min read
10:19UTC

Portugal published immigration backlog figures on 2 June that look large and resolve little: none carries a breakdown for the D8 nomad visa, so applicants cannot tell whether their own file is moving. Immigration lawyers again called the clearance pledge offensive.

SocietyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Portugal's backlog totals omit the D8, so nomad applicants still cannot see whether their own file moves.

Portugal's government published backlog figures on Tuesday 2 June that look large and resolve little. AIMA (the Agency for Integration, Migration and Asylum) reported 525,000 immigration files decided, 763,000 appointments completed and 473,000 positive outcomes since its task force began 1. The totals read as reassuring, yet none carries a breakdown for the D8 digital nomad visa, so a D8 applicant cannot tell from the figures whether their own file is moving. Immigration lawyers still call the pledge to clear the backlog by the end of 2026 offensive, the same word they used in March .

The D8 now demands income of about EUR 3,680 a month and a deposit near EUR 11,040, and the first card takes a year or more to arrive. AIMA's March mediator strike, which cut D8 processing capacity , is the operational backdrop against which these June totals were published; throughput rose against a capacity that had already been hit. The deeper problem sits in how Portugal counts citizenship. The promulgated nationality law runs the clock from first card issuance , so a wait of a year or more before the clock even starts pushes the practical naturalisation floor past eleven years from arrival.

The government's reply is that throughput is genuinely rising and that the figures cover all files since the task force began, not the pre-existing queue alone. That framing is defensible on the arithmetic. The lawyers' counter is that a headline total of decisions tells an individual applicant nothing about the category they applied under, and that a nomad still waits a year or more for a first card regardless of how the cumulative number grows. Italy's fully digital route, opened on 1 June, throws that Portuguese wait into sharper relief for anyone weighing the two destinations.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Portugal has an immigration agency called AIMA that processes all residency applications, including a visa for remote workers called the D8. On 2 June 2026, the Portuguese government published figures showing AIMA had decided 525,000 files and completed 763,000 appointments since a special task force was set up to clear the backlog. It sounds like a lot of progress. But immigration lawyers are angry because those figures do not say how many of those were D8 applications specifically, and the wait for a first D8 residence card is still over a year. The problem goes deeper. A new Portuguese nationality law, signed into force on 3 May 2026, now starts the countdown to Portuguese citizenship only when your first residence card is actually issued, not when you first apply. So the longer AIMA takes to issue your card, the further away your eventual citizenship becomes. For someone who arrived in 2024 and is still waiting for their first card in mid-2026, the practical citizenship timeline has now stretched to roughly 11 or 12 years from arrival.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

AIMA inherited SEF's caseload without inheriting SEF's full officer headcount; the decision to classify cultural mediators as casework substitutes rather than supplementary staff created a single point of failure exposed when those mediators struck on 30 March 2026.

Portugal's nationality law, promulgated on 3 May 2026, starts the residency clock at first card issuance rather than application submission. This multiplies the value of each first-card decision and perversely increases applicant motivation to resubmit or escalate pending files, adding re-work overhead to the existing queue.

The D8 requires income verification against a EUR 3,680 monthly threshold and a EUR 11,040 bank deposit, documentation that demands higher-skilled casework than the rental-residency renewals dominating AIMA's volume queue. All three causes compound in the same direction: more casework per file, fewer trained officers to do it.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Portugal's failure to publish a D8-specific processing breakdown alongside the 2 June 2026 aggregate figures means applicants cannot verify the government's end-2026 clearance pledge against category-level data. The pledge is unverifiable and therefore unenforceable by affected applicants.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Consequence

    The nationality law's clock-from-card-issuance rule, combined with AIMA's current first-card wait above one year, pushes the effective naturalisation floor for D8 holders who arrived in 2024 past eleven years from arrival.

    Long term · Assessed
  • Risk

    A second AIMA mediator strike, or a further breakdown in the agency's cultural-mediator staffing model, would extend first-card waits beyond the current one-year floor with no stated contingency mechanism.

    Short term · Reported
First Reported In

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The Portugal News· 14 Jun 2026
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