A new European travel requirement called ETIAS arrives in 2026, and it is causing real confusion for people planning a move to Portugal. The short version: it matters for your scouting trips, not for living here. Here is what it is, who needs it, and the dates that matter.
What ETIAS is
ETIAS (the European Travel Information and Authorisation System) is a travel authorisation, not a visa. Visa-exempt travellers, including citizens of the US, UK, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, will need it for short stays in the Schengen Area. Key facts from the official EU information:
- It costs €20 per application. Applicants under 18 or over 70 are exempt from the fee, but still need an approved ETIAS.
- It is valid for three years, or until your passport expires, whichever comes first.
- It is tied to your passport and covers short stays (the usual 90 days in any 180).
When it starts
ETIAS is expected to launch in the last quarter of 2026. There will be a transitional period of at least six months during which you are asked to hold one but will not be refused entry without it, followed by a grace period for first-time travellers. Separately, the Entry/Exit System (EES), which records fingerprints and a face scan at the border, is already being rolled out on entry and exit to and from the Schengen Area.
The part that matters for movers
ETIAS is for short visits only. It does not let you live in Portugal, and it is not a substitute for a residency visa such as the D7 or D8. Once you hold a Portuguese residence permit, you do not need ETIAS at all. So it affects your research and scouting trips before the move, not your life once you are resident.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need ETIAS if I have a D7 or D8?
No. Holders of a Portuguese residence permit are outside the ETIAS short-stay system.
Can I use ETIAS to move to Portugal?
No. It only covers short visits. To live here you still need a residency visa and permit.
When exactly does it begin?
The last quarter of 2026 is the current official expectation. Always check the EU site before you book travel.
See if Portugal is right for you
Sources
- Official EU ETIAS information: travel-europe.europa.eu/etias
- European Commission migration and home affairs (EES and ETIAS rollout): home-affairs.ec.europa.eu
General information, current as of June 2026. Travel rules and dates change; confirm the latest position on the official EU site before you travel. Related reading: our Visa and Immigration overview.