Skip to content
You can now search across every topic, entity and event.What's new
Nomads & Communities
14JUN

AIMA mediators strike, D8 pipeline stalls

4 min read
11:49UTC

Portugal's migration agency is on strike at its own peak application season, with strike adhesion above 70% in Porto and a caseload that has never fully cleared.

SocietyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Portugal's digital nomad pipeline is bottlenecked at the specific staffing layer the agency's marketing depended on.

Cultural mediators at Portugal's Agência para a Integração, Migrações e Asilo (AIMA, the national migration and asylum agency) walked out on strike on 30 March 2026, with reported adhesion above 70% in Porto according to the strikers' own union count 1. The strike hits the pipeline that processes Portugal's D8 digital nomad visa at the worst possible week of the calendar, during the March-to-May application peak.

Cultural mediators make up nearly half of AIMA's effective front-line staffing, and the agency's backlog has never fully cleared. A pending residency caseload of 40,000 to 60,000 cases remains unresolved, the residual tail of the 400,000 files AIMA inherited in October 2023 from the dissolved Serviço de Estrangeiros e Fronteiras (SEF, the former Portuguese border and immigration service). The D8's income floor sits at €3,680 a month, roughly four times the 2026 Portuguese minimum wage. Applicants at that income tier are precisely the population for whom processing delays translate directly into lost relocation dates and employer arrangements that cannot be indefinitely held.

The structural issue the strike exposes is the gap between a regime's marketing and its processing capacity. Portugal's D8 has been one of the two or three most visible digital nomad visas in Europe since 2022, and the marketing has outrun the staffing. Cultural mediators were on precarious contracts, which is what made it possible to expand headline capacity without a structural commitment to the agency's front line. When those contracts lost their political cover, adhesion to the strike ran above 70% in Porto in the first week, which is rare for a Portuguese public-sector action at that intake level. Lisbon adhesion has not been separately reported but is presumed lower.

The counter-reading, from AIMA management, is that the residual caseload is inherited, that the agency's current intake rate was meeting statutory requirements before the strike, and that a tranche of new hires was scheduled for the second quarter. That position has not survived contact with the lawyers working Portuguese residency matters, who described the end-of-2026 backlog commitment in terms the briefing reproduces in full in the next event. Whether the strike resolves before the May-June D8 peak, or escalates into further stoppages, is the operative variable for any nomad currently holding a Portuguese appointment.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Portugal has a visa called the D8, specifically designed for digital nomads and remote workers. To get it, applicants need to earn at least €3,680 a month and go through an interview process at Portugal's immigration agency, AIMA. AIMA was created in 2023 to replace an older agency called SEF that was shut down after a human-rights scandal. On 30 March 2026, staff at AIMA called a strike. More than 70% of workers in the Porto office, which handles a large share of D8 applications, walked out. There are already 40,000 to 60,000 applications waiting to be processed, and the strike will lengthen those queues further. The European Commission has already started legal proceedings against Portugal for being too slow at processing applications.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The SEF dissolution was a political decision made for reasons unrelated to immigration processing capacity: the agency was disbanded in October 2023 following a 2020 inquiry into the death of Ihor Homeniuk in SEF custody, which found systemic oversight failures.

The dissolution was a political response to a human-rights scandal, not a capacity improvement initiative. AIMA was created to replace SEF's functions but with different staffing terms, a different legal mandate, and the same caseload inheritance.

The D8 visa is disproportionately affected because cultural mediators are the specific staff category responsible for nationality-verification interviews, and Porto concentrates D8 processing because it handles the highest volume of Brazilian and Anglophone applications (Brazil is the largest source country for D8 applicants). Strike adhesion above 70% in Porto is therefore structurally more damaging to the D8 pipeline than an equivalent national strike rate would imply.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Portugal's D8 digital nomad visa pipeline is effectively frozen during the strike period, with no emergency processing mechanism announced.

    Immediate · High
  • Consequence

    The European Commission's infringement proceeding against Portugal for processing delays will advance, but financial penalties are unlikely to resolve the underlying staffing crisis.

    Medium term · Medium
  • Risk

    Repeat industrial action is likely before end-2026, given that the structural salary dispute between cultural mediators and the Portuguese civil service has not been resolved.

    Short term · High
First Reported In

Update #1 · Platforms, protests and the policy churn

The Portugal Post / Portugal Resident· 17 Apr 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Mexico City housing movements
Mexico City housing movements
The Asamblea de Barrios and allied housing organisations argue that the registry's 30-day window was timed to minimise compliance by individual hosts while leaving commercial operators registered as companies, who hold roughly half of CDMX's short-let supply, outside the three-property cap entirely. The practical housing-displacement pressure is concentrated on the hosts the registry does not reach.
Portuguese immigration lawyers
Portuguese immigration lawyers
Lawyers repeated the word 'offensive' about the end-2026 clearance pledge after Portugal's 2 June AIMA figures omitted a D8-specific breakdown for the second consecutive reporting period. The complaint is precise: a headline total of decided files tells an individual D8 applicant nothing about the category they applied under.
Italy's Ministero degli Affari Esteri
Italy's Ministero degli Affari Esteri
Italy's 1 June digital visa launch completed a dual-track posture: CIN/BDSR STR compliance on EU Regulation day one and now a fully digital nomad visa workflow at 35-45 days processing. The ministry faces the question of whether its consular review capacity was pre-scaled before the demand increase that removing in-person submission barriers historically generates.
Non-EU remote workers in Georgia
Non-EU remote workers in Georgia
The 11 June dialogue gave the roughly 6,000 to 8,000 non-EU nomads using Georgia as a Schengen reset base nine more months, not a resolution. The January 2027 member-state vote could close that route; Georgia's MIA fine ladder of 2,000 GEL per first offence has operated since 1 May with no published enforcement data.
Airbnb
Airbnb
STS 620/2026 voided the registration instrument that formed part of the basis for Airbnb's EUR 64 million fine, giving its pending reconsideration motion at the High Court of Justice of Madrid a competence-based argument unavailable a month ago. The motion has no hearing date set.
Generalitat Valenciana
Generalitat Valenciana
The Valencian regional government filed Appeal 143/2025 that produced STS 620/2026, then in the same fortnight enacted Spain's tightest local STR rule, a 2% cap on tourist lets in pressured zones. Valencia's strategy is to kill the national registration layer it cannot control while keeping the local one it can.