Portugal's president promulgated the country's revised nationality law on 3 May 2026, locking in the parliament's 3 April vote to extend the residency-to-citizenship requirement to ten years for most nationalities and seven for European Union and Lusophone applicants. The operationally novel detail applies to new applicants only: the residency clock now starts at first residence-card issuance, not at application submission. Because AIMA (the Agency for Integration, Migration and Asylum, Portugal's migration body) currently takes 12 to 18 months to issue a first card, the effective naturalisation floor for third-country nationals is now roughly 11 to 11.5 years from arrival, and for D8 digital-nomad visa holders the practical pathway runs past a decade. 1 The agency's processing delay no longer counts toward the clock; it counts against it.

Portugal starts the clock at the card
Portugal's president promulgated the revised nationality law on 3 May, locking in the ten-year citizenship requirement and starting the residency clock at first residence-card issuance for new applicants.
Portugal's new law starts the citizenship clock at card issuance, so AIMA's backlog pushes new applicants past eleven years.
Deep Analysis
Portugal has changed how it counts the time you need to live there before you can apply for citizenship. Previously, you needed to have been a legal resident for five years. Parliament voted on 3 April 2026 to extend that to 10 years for most nationalities, and the president signed it into law on 3 May. The important operational detail: your time only starts counting from when Portugal's immigration agency, AIMA (Agencia para a Integracao, Migracoes e Asilo), issues your first residence card. Currently AIMA takes 12 to 18 months just to issue that first card. So in practice, someone who arrives in Portugal today and applies immediately faces roughly 11 to 11.5 years before they can apply for citizenship, not 10. This change is for new applicants only. People who already have a residence card had their clock already running before this law passed. The courts specifically ruled that existing cardholders cannot have their accrued time stripped away.