In 2025, foreign buyers purchased 41,086 homes and apartments in Portugal, a 6.6% increase from the previous year, according to Portugal’s National Institute of Statistics (INE).
Brazilian citizens constituted the largest group of foreign buyers. In 2025, they purchased 9,808 properties, a 27.5% increase from 2024. Angolan citizens ranked second with 4,145 purchases, marking a 2.2% increase. The French took third place, purchasing 3,765 properties, a 6.2% decrease from the previous year.
According to INE data, foreign buyers with tax residency in Portugal completed 34,834 transactions, an 11.4% increase from 2024. At the same time, purchases by non-residents declined: foreigners without tax residency in Portugal acquired 8,471 properties, 13.3% fewer than the previous year. This marked the third consecutive year of declining activity among non-residents.
This gap reflects a shift in the structure of foreign demand. The Portuguese real estate market is increasingly relying not on traditional foreign investors, but on foreigners already living in the country. These may include migrant workers, relocators, families with long-term residence permits, and members of diasporas, primarily Brazilian and Angolan.
Foreigners continue to purchase more expensive properties than local residents. According to INE data, the average value of real estate purchased by buyers with tax residency in Portugal was EUR234,120. Buyers from EU countries paid an average of EUR335,640 per property, while buyers from non-EU countries paid EUR470,277. British and American buyers purchased particularly expensive properties: the average transaction price was EUR512,585 and EUR479,403, respectively.
Geographically, demand from non-residents remains concentrated in the most attractive regions. In 2025, the Algarve accounted for 29.7% of non-resident transactions, the Northern region for 20%, the Central region for 14.9%, and Greater Lisbon for 12.5%. In terms of transaction value, the Algarve’s dominance is even more pronounced: the region accounted for 42.4% of total non-resident investment in housing.
The INE also noted strong growth among buyers from Ukraine, Cape Verde, and Venezuela: the number of transactions by citizens of these countries increased by more than 25% in 2025. However, the exact number of properties purchased by Ukrainians is not disclosed in the INE’s brief publication or in reports by the Portuguese media.
For Ukrainians, Portugal remains an attractive destination due to its safety, access to the EU, labor market, diaspora ties, and the possibility of long-term residency. At the same time, following the removal of real estate as a basis for the Golden Visa, investment demand has become less tied to obtaining a residence permit and more dependent on actual relocation, income levels, and long-term residency plans.