If you’ve been researching a move to Portugal, you’ve almost certainly run into NHR — the Non-Habitual Resident regime that made the country famous for low-tax expat life. Here’s the thing most articles bury: for anyone becoming resident now, NHR is off the table. It closed to new applicants, and the regime you actually apply for in 2026 is IFICI, often called “NHR 2.0”. They are not the same, and confusing them is the most expensive mistake a new arrival can make.
This guide sets the two side by side — what each does, who qualifies, and the one deadline you cannot miss — so you know exactly which one applies to you. When you want real numbers, our NHR/IFICI calculator estimates your position in a couple of minutes.
The short version
- NHR is closed to new entrants. The final transitional applications ended 31 March 2025. If you already hold NHR, you keep your benefits for the remainder of your 10-year window — nothing changes for you.
- IFICI (Incentivo Fiscal à Investigação Científica e Inovação) is the current regime for new residents. It gives a 20% flat rate on qualifying Portuguese-source income and favourable treatment of most foreign-source income, for up to 10 years — but only for people in specific innovation, research, teaching and highly-skilled roles.
- The IFICI application deadline is hard: 15 January of the year after you become tax resident, via Portal das Finanças.
NHR vs IFICI at a glance
| NHR (old regime) | IFICI (NHR 2.0) | |
|---|---|---|
| Open to new applicants? | No — closed (transitional window ended 31 March 2025) | Yes |
| Who it’s for | Broad: almost any new resident, incl. retirees & passive income | Narrow: qualifying science, innovation, tech, teaching and highly-skilled roles |
| Headline benefit | 20% on certain Portuguese income; broad foreign-income exemptions (incl. many pensions historically) | 20% flat on qualifying Portuguese-source income; exemption on most foreign-source income |
| Duration | 10 years | Up to 10 years |
| Prior-residency rule | Not resident in Portugal in the previous 5 years | Not resident in Portugal in the previous 5 years |
| Application deadline | Closed | 15 January of the year after becoming resident |
| Ongoing obligation | Standard annual IRS return | Annual IRS return plus yearly re-validation of eligibility |
The crucial difference isn’t the rate — both centre on 20%. It’s who qualifies. NHR was famously broad; IFICI is deliberately targeted at people who add to Portugal’s research and innovation economy. A retiree living on a foreign pension who would have sailed into NHR generally does not qualify for IFICI.
What NHR did (and why it mattered)
NHR ran from 2009 and was, for a decade, one of Europe’s most attractive regimes for incoming residents. It offered a 20% flat rate on certain high-value Portuguese-source professions and, crucially, broad exemptions on foreign-source income — which is why it drew so many remote workers, investors and retirees. Its generosity, especially on foreign pensions, is ultimately what led the government to wind it down amid domestic pressure over housing and fairness.
If you already have NHR, none of this removes your status: existing holders keep the benefits for the rest of their 10-year term. But you cannot newly apply, and no amount of paperwork reopens it.
What IFICI actually offers in 2026
IFICI is narrower but, for the right person, just as valuable. In broad terms it provides:
- A 20% flat IRS rate on qualifying Portuguese-source employment and self-employment income from an eligible activity — instead of the progressive scale that climbs well past 40%.
- Exemption on most categories of foreign-source income (such as certain dividends, interest, rental and capital gains), subject to the detailed rules and anti-abuse conditions.
- A benefit period of up to 10 consecutive years, provided you remain tax resident and keep meeting the conditions each year.
The catch is eligibility. IFICI is tied to approved activities — broadly higher education and scientific research, qualified jobs in certified innovation or R&D-driven companies, roles recognised under investment-incentive frameworks, and certain highly-qualified professions. You also must not have been Portuguese tax resident in the previous five years, and you must actively work in a qualifying role to keep the benefit. Different bodies (such as those overseeing research, innovation and investment incentives) sign off on different eligible categories, so which authority certifies you depends on your exact role.
Because eligibility is role-specific and the rules carry real detail, this is a regime to confirm with a tax professional before you rely on it — the Autoridade Tributária is the definitive source.
Who qualifies — a quick sorter
- Remote employee of a foreign company, not in a certified Portuguese innovation role? You likely do not qualify for IFICI. You’ll be taxed under the normal rules — model your take-home with the net salary calculator.
- Freelancer/self-employed in a qualifying tech, research or highly-skilled field? You may qualify; the 20% flat rate can be significant. Check the mechanics in our freelancer tax guide and the freelancer tax calculator.
- Hired into a certified Portuguese company (Tech Visa territory) or academia/research? This is IFICI’s core target group.
- Retiree on a foreign pension? Generally not eligible — IFICI is not a pensioner regime the way NHR effectively became.
This is a sorter, not a ruling. Eligibility turns on your specific role and employer certification, so verify before you count on it.
A quick worked example
Numbers make the difference concrete. Imagine a qualifying professional earning €60,000 of eligible Portuguese-source income. Under IFICI’s 20% flat rate, the IRS on that income is roughly €12,000. Taxed under the normal progressive scale — where the upper slices climb past 40% — the same income attracts materially more, often several thousand euros more once you’re into the higher brackets. Over a ten-year window, that gap compounds into a very large number, which is exactly why eligibility is worth confirming carefully rather than guessing.
The illustration is directional, not a quote — your actual figure depends on deductions, filing status and the precise mix of income. Run your own scenario in the NHR/IFICI calculator before you plan around it, and if you’re an employee comparing regimes, the net salary calculator shows normal-rate take-home for the same salary.
The 15 January deadline — don’t miss it
This is the part that catches people out. IFICI is not automatic and it is not open-ended. You must apply through Portal das Finanças by 15 January of the year following the year you become tax resident. Become resident in 2026, and your window closes on 15 January 2027. Miss it, and there is no retroactive fix — you simply don’t get the regime for that entry. Then, each year, you re-validate that you still meet the conditions.
So the practical timeline is: establish tax residency (183+ days, or a habitual home here) → confirm your role is an eligible activity → gather the certification → apply before 15 January. Build that deadline into your first-year plan the day you arrive.
How IFICI fits your annual tax return
IFICI doesn’t replace your IRS return — it changes how parts of it are taxed. You still file annually between 1 April and 30 June, declaring worldwide income, with qualifying income taxed at the flat rate and eligible foreign income exempt. If foreign income is involved, the interaction with double-taxation treaties matters. Walk through the filing mechanics in our IRS filing guide, and see the wider residency picture in the tax and NIF pillar.
Common mistakes
- Assuming NHR is still available. It isn’t for new applicants. Any 2026 promise of “NHR benefits” for a fresh application is a red flag.
- Assuming IFICI is as broad as NHR was. It’s role-specific. Retirees and generic remote workers often don’t qualify.
- Missing the 15 January deadline. No retroactive applications.
- Forgetting annual re-validation. IFICI must be maintained each year, not just claimed once.
- Confusing the 20% rate with a blanket exemption. Foreign-income treatment has conditions; get it checked.
FAQ
Can I still get NHR in 2026? No. NHR closed to new applicants; the transitional window ended 31 March 2025. Existing holders keep their benefits.
Is IFICI really “NHR 2.0”? That’s the nickname, but it’s narrower — targeted at innovation, research, teaching and highly-skilled roles rather than everyone.
What’s the tax rate under IFICI? A 20% flat rate on qualifying Portuguese-source income, plus exemption on most foreign-source income, for up to 10 years.
When do I apply? By 15 January of the year after you become tax resident, through Portal das Finanças.
I’m a retiree — do I qualify? Usually not. IFICI is not a pensioner regime. Get personalised advice on your options.
Tax outcomes depend on your exact role, employer certification and personal facts, and the rules carry detail this guide can’t fully cover — treat it as a map, not personalised advice, and confirm eligibility before you rely on it.
Not sure whether you qualify for IFICI, or how much you’d actually save? Run the numbers with our NHR/IFICI calculator, then let GrowIN Portugal’s tax team confirm your eligibility and handle the application. Explore our services to get started.