Everything Brazil citizens need to know about applying for a Portugal visa. Updated April 2026.
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| Visa Type | Visa-free (tourism) / D7 Visa (long-stay) |
| Application Fee | Free for tourism (up to 90 days) |
| Processing Time | No visa needed for short stays |
| Maximum Stay | 90 days in any 180-day period (visa-free) |
| Official Portal | Official application site |
Brazilian citizens can enter Portugal visa-free for tourism up to 90 days
For stays over 90 days, apply for a D7 (passive income) or other long-stay visa
Must show proof of accommodation and sufficient funds at border
Travel insurance recommended but not mandatory for visa-free entry
Brazilians do NOT need a visa for Portugal for stays under 90 days — but must still show proof of accommodation and return flight at the border.
Complete 2026 Guide
Brazil to Portugal Visa: Full Application Walkthrough
Step-by-step process, required documents, financial requirements, and strategy tips
Brazil citizens can enter Portugal without a visa for short stays. Brazilian citizens can enter Portugal visa-free for tourism up to 90 days For longer stays, a visa application is required.
The Visa-free (tourism) / D7 Visa (long-stay) application fee is Free for tourism (up to 90 days). Budget for the total cost including biometrics, service centre fees, and any required medical examinations.
Standard processing for Brazil citizens applying for a Portugal Visa-free (tourism) / D7 Visa (long-stay) takes No visa needed for short stays. Apply well in advance of your intended travel date to allow for potential delays.
Beyond standard documents (valid passport, photos, financial proof), Brazil citizens must meet these corridor-specific requirements: Brazilian citizens can enter Portugal visa-free for tourism up to 90 days. For stays over 90 days, apply for a D7 (passive income) or other long-stay visa. Must show proof of accommodation and sufficient funds at border. Travel insurance recommended but not mandatory for visa-free entry. TravelReady generates a personalised checklist for the Brazil-Portugal corridor.
Brazilians do NOT need a visa for Portugal for stays under 90 days — but must still show proof of accommodation and return flight at the border. The most common rejection causes for this corridor are incomplete documentation, insufficient financial evidence, and weak ties to Brazil. TravelReady's Expert Document Validation checks your documents against embassy rules specific to the Brazil-Portugal route before you submit.
Data sources: Requirements sourced from official embassy and consulate websites, IATA travel regulations, and government immigration portals.
Update policy: Requirements are reviewed continuously and updated within 24 hours when policy changes are announced. Last reviewed: April 2026
TravelReady is not affiliated with any government or embassy. Always verify requirements with the official consulate for your destination.