Portugal has been one of Europe's standout destinations for international buyers over the past decade. Its appeal rests on lifestyle, a established expat infrastructure and a rental market supported by both tourism and a growing services economy. The investment landscape has shifted recently — most notably around residency programmes — so it pays to look at each region on its own terms.
Figures below are indicative ranges from seller-published data, not forecasts. Yields vary by property and management; do your own due diligence.
The regions
Lisbon
The capital combines a deep long-let market (relocations, tech, services) with strong tourism. Prime central districts are tightly supplied. Indicative gross yields around 4–5% centrally, with renovation and conversion upside in older stock.
The Algarve
Portugal's premier coastal market — Lagos, Albufeira, Vilamoura, Tavira and the "golden triangle" around Quinta do Lago. Long season, mature holiday-rental demand and a wide price range from apartments to prime villas. Indicative gross yields around 4–6% on rental units; prime golf-resort property is lifestyle-led.
Porto
More affordable than Lisbon, with a strong cultural draw and a fast-improving rental market. Renovation of historic buildings has been a recurring theme. Indicative gross yields around 5–6%.
Silver Coast (Costa de Prata)
The stretch from Ericeira to Nazaré and Óbidos — surfing, lower prices and growing interest from buyers priced out of Lisbon. Indicative gross yields around 5–7% on the right stock.
Madeira
A year-round, winter-sun island market with a distinct lifestyle appeal and a tax regime that has historically drawn remote workers and retirees.
Market trends to keep in mind
- Residency rules changed. Real estate is no longer a qualifying route for Portugal's residency-by-investment programme (see our tax & residency guide). Buy for the property case, not the visa.
- Short-term-rental ("Alojamento Local") rules have tightened in pressured areas like central Lisbon and parts of the Algarve. Confirm licensing.
- Tourism remains strong, supporting the Algarve and island markets through a long season.
In short
- Lisbon and Porto are the strongest pure-rental cities; the Algarve leads coastal/holiday demand.
- Indicative gross yields broadly 4–7% depending on region.
- Residency-by-investment no longer runs through real estate — treat any property purely on its merits.
This is general information, not financial, legal or tax advice; Onora does not verify seller figures. Browse Portuguese listings or see our FAQ.