Moving to Portugal is often sold as a lifestyle upgrade. But then you start a business and tax is usually treated as an afterthought — until the first unexpected bill or penalty.
This article is about avoiding expensive mistakes, staying compliant, and keeping more of what you earn.
Mistake 1: Assuming Your Old Country “Stops Taxing You” Automatically
You would be surprise with the number of people that move, start a life in Portugal, and assume their tax situation resets or just continues as it is.
In the worst case scenario, you could end up with:
- tax residency in Portugal and
- continuing tax obligations abroad (depending on your country, ties, and timing)
How to avoid this
- Know your Portugal tax residency start date (usually when you meet residency criteria — often linked to time spent in Portugal and/or where you have your habitual home).
- If you’re leaving another country, confirm what they consider a “tax exit” and what proof they require.
- Keep a file of your move: flight dates, rental contract, utility bills, registration dates.
Double taxation is often avoidable in Portugal, but only if residency and reporting are handled properly and on time.
Mistake 2: Not Declaring Foreign Income
Portugal requires reporting of worldwide income for tax residents. That doesn’t always mean you’ll pay tax twice — it just means that you must declare it to the tax authority.
Common examples:
- dividends and interest from foreign banks/brokers
- rental income abroad
- pensions
- freelance income billed to foreign clients
- capital gains from selling foreign shares
How to avoid this
- Keep annual statements from all your banks and brokers
- If you’re unsure whether some income should be treated as Portuguese taxable income, assume it needs review before filing
Properly structured foreign income reporting can reduce risk of penalties and preserve access to treaty credits.
Mistake 3: Choosing the Wrong “Box to Tick” for Freelance Work
Foreign residents often register their activity with the tax authority before start issuing invoices, but they may:
- pick the wrong activity code
- choose the wrong tax regime
- forget VAT and Social Security triggers
How to avoid this
Before your first invoice, clarify:
- your activity classification
- whether you should use simplified or organized accounting
- whether VAT applies now, later, or not at all
- what Social Security contributions will look like
The first setup decisions often determine your tax outcome for the entire year and if not reviewed can make you pay more tax than you should.
Mistake 4: Assuming “Digital Nomad” Means “No Portuguese Tax”
Working remotely from Portugal for a foreign client can still create Portuguese tax exposure if you are tax resident here. In Portugal, tax residency determines the country where you are taxed.
How to avoid this
If you live in Portugal most of the year, plan for Portuguese taxation and structure accordingly.
The best time to plan is before income starts flowing and any correction can be performed promptly. Waiting for after the year-end can lead to costly tax bills.
Mistake 5: Ignoring VAT Until It Becomes a Problem
VAT (IVA) is one of the most common “surprise” problems for foreign residents who freelance or run small businesses.
Two typical mistakes:
- charging VAT when you shouldn’t (pricing yourself out unnecessarily)
- not charging VAT when you should (then paying it out of your own pocket later)
How to avoid this
- Confirm whether your activity is VAT-exempt, outside scope, or subject to VAT
- Know your turnover thresholds and what triggers a change
- Review VAT position as you scale
Mistake 6: Missing Deadlines
Portugal’s system is deadline-driven. Most penalties in Portugal are avoidable but once triggered, interest and fines start accumulate immediately and automatically.
These are some of the missed deadlines that lead to penalties:
- late tax returns
- late VAT submissions (if registered)
- missing Social Security declarations
- paying tax after the deadline
How to avoid this
- Know which tax calendar applies to your activity
- Separate “submission date” from “payment date”
- Track monthly vs quarterly obligations
- Confirm your returns were actually submitted
- Review your tax portal at least once per month
- Plan cash flow before tax is due
Whilst missed deadlines do not improve your tax position, they decrease your take-home pay unnecessarily.
Mistake 7: Poor Documentation – Especially for Expenses
The declaration of business expenses in most countries is straightforward.
However, the portuguese system is invoice-based and as such, documentation quality matters.
When allowing for deductible business expenses, do not simply assume that:
- a bank statement is enough
- an expense “counts” because it’s business-related
- receipts in another language or from another country will authomatically be accepted
How to avoid this
- Keep invoices/receipts properly issued and stored
- Separate business and personal spending as much as possible
- Keep supplier invoices and proof of payment for cross-border expenses
Good documentation increases the likelihood of an expense being accepted as a legitimate business expense in case of a tax audit.
Mistake 8: Treating “Tax Regime” as Permanent
People typically choose a tax regime once when registering their activity (simplified vs organized accounting, VAT status, etc.) and the default choices are usually efficient when starting-out.
But the efficient regime changes when:
- income rises
- your expense structure changes
- you hire subcontractors
- you start a second income stream (rentals, dividends, capital gains)
How to avoid this
Review your tax structure at least:
- mid-year (before it’s too late to adjust planning)
- year-end (to prepare the next year properly)
A Simple Checklist
If you are a foreign resident in Portugal, make sure you can answer these clearly:
- Am I a Portuguese tax resident this year? From what date?
- What income streams do I have worldwide (salary, freelance, dividends, rent, gains)?
- Are all of them being reported correctly in Portugal?
- If I freelance: what is my tax regime and VAT position?
- Do I know my main annual deadlines?
- Are my invoices/receipts clean and organized?
- Do I have a mid-year review scheduled?
If any of these are unclear, it might be time to book a consultation with an accountant.
Final Thought
Most “tax problems” foreign residents face are simply basic structure and reporting issues left unattended.
When arriving to any new country the goal should be to: stay compliant, avoid penalties, and keep your tax position efficient.









