What Expenses Are Actually Deductible Under the Simplified Regime?

Many freelancers assume expenses work the same under the simplified regime as they do under full accounting. In practice, the rules are different. Here’s what actually counts — and what can affect your taxable income.
Expenses that count under Portugal’s simplified tax regime for freelancers, including social security, workspace rent, professional services, travel and utilities.

Under the simplified regime, your taxable income is calculated using a fixed coefficient (e.g., 0.75 or 0.35 for many service activities) but there are some justification requirements that you must meet in case of a tax audit.

So what freelancers and businesses need to ask is: “Will this expense help me meet the ‘justification’ rules?”

The focus should then be to validate/allocating expenses correctly and to hit the justification requirements.


What “deductible” means in the simplified regime

If you are in a service activity the law assumes part of your income covers expenses (25% or 65% depending on the activity).

But there is a catch: part of that assumed deduction is conditional on you having (and identifying) enough documented business expenses. That part is 15% of the annual gross-iconme.

If you properly document and identify enough qualifying expenses, you keep the intended benefit of the simplified regime.

If you don’t, your taxable income can increase and so do your taxes.

Many people think “simplified = no need to care about expenses”. That is often false once income grows.

This justification becomes relevant when gross-income is greater than €30,500 in 2026 for people with a single source of income.


The expense categories that actually count

For the 0.75 / 0.35 service coefficients, the qualifying items include:

1) Social Security

The greater of:

  • a specific deduction amount (€4,587.09 in 2026), or
  • the mandatory Social Security contributions connected to the activity.

Social Security often “covers” a meaningful part of the justification requirements by itself for many freelancers.


2) Staff costs (if you have employees)

Salaries and remuneration-related costs that are properly reported.


3) Rent of a property used for the activity (if you have one)

Rents for premises allocated to the activity (supported by invoices/documents communicated to the tax authority).


4) A notional cost for property you own (if used for the activity)

Instead of rent, the law allows a percentage of the VPT (valor patrimonial tributário) for properties allocated to the activity (with a higher percentage mentioned for short-term rental operators).


5) “Other expenses” related to the activity

This is where most items fall, as long as they are related to the activity and supported by proper invoices. Some examples:

  • Consumables/materials
  • Electricity, water
  • Transport and communications
  • Insurance
  • Leasing rents
  • Professional and legal fees
  • Travel and stays
  • Business imports

Important: The anchor rule is business purpose + documentation.


Mixed-use expenses – the “25% rule”

If certain expenses are only partially used for the activity the law provides that some categories are considered at only 25%.

Classic example: if you work from home, you may still have qualifying expenses (utilities, communications), but you often only get a partial recognition.


What it must be done in practice (otherwise it won’t count)

To have these expenses considered, you generally need two things:

Correct invoices (with your NIF)

If the invoice isn’t issued properly, it usually won’t count. If the invoice was issued with the wrong NIF, the supplier can usually cancel it and issue a new one with the correct NIF at your request.

Identify them as business-related (on the Portal / e-Fatura)

The law explicitly requires identifying invoices that are exclusively or partially related to the activity, within the relevant deadlines, through the Portal.


The most common mistakes

  • Having invoices but not marking them as professional → you lose the benefit
  • Assuming all expenses are “deductible” like in organized accounting → wrong model
  • Not understanding partial allocation → you overestimate your expenses and get a surprise tax bill
  • Optimizing the wrong thing → tracking minor costs while missing the big buckets: Social Security, rent, core professional expenses

A simple “tax efficiency” checklist

If you’re under simplified the simplified regime, do this:

  • Always request invoices with your NIF for business spending.
  • Each month: validate and mark professional invoices
  • For home office costs: be conservative and use partial where appropriate.
  • Track the few categories which have greater contribution for the justification requirements:
    • Social Security paid
    • Rent (if applicable)
    • Core business costs (software, communications, insurance, professional dues, travel when justified)
  • Once revenue grows (or you’re consistently missing the “justification” threshold), run a comparison: simplified vs organized accounting.

Final thought

The simplified regime works well for many freelancers.

But it only works properly if you treat your expenses seriously.

Keeping the right invoices and identifying them correctly is often the difference between paying the tax you should pay and paying more than necessary.

Atlantic Accounting is a Portugal-based accounting and advisory firm supporting freelancers, entrepreneurs, and international businesses operating in the Portuguese market. The firm provides accounting and tax advice with a focus on clarity, efficiency, and regulatory precision.

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