Lisbon became the go-to destination for those wanting to work remotely from Europe while speaking Portuguese. In 2020, it was cheap, empty, and offered generous tax benefits. By 2026, it's none of those things. Rent in Príncipe Real has tripled in five years, the NHR ended in January 2024, the D7 process slowed down, and middle-class Brazilians became targets of gentrification protests. Yet, there's still a queue to get in. This text is what I wish I had read before signing a six-month contract: real costs by neighborhood, decent coworking spaces, cafes with wifi measured in mbps, what's left of the tax regime, and the uncomfortable question — does Lisbon still make sense for you, or are you arriving ten years too late?
10 min read
I arrived in Lisbon in February to stay for three months. I stayed for six. I left in August convinced of one thing: the city is good, but the story Brazil tells about Lisbon stopped in 2019, and no one updated the script.
This text updates it.
What Happened to Lisbon Between 2019 and 2026
In 2019, you could rent a renovated T2 in Santos for €1,100. Today, the same apartment goes for €2,400, and there's a queue of applicants. The short explanation is: real estate Golden Visa (abolished in 2023), generous NHR (ended in 2024), post-pandemic remote work boom, real estate funds buying entire neighborhoods, Airbnb destroying long-term stock.
The long explanation needs a book. I'll stick to the short one.
The practical effect is that Lisbon in 2026 is no longer the cheap Lisbon of the digital nomad. It's still cheap compared to Paris, Amsterdam, or Berlin. But compared to Mexico City, Buenos Aires, or Bangkok, it's become expensive. A furnished T1 in Príncipe Real today costs around $1,950 per month in rent. That's without condo fees, electricity, or internet.
The city is also under social tension. In 2024 and 2025, there were large protests against touristification — demonstrations organized by Habita (residents' association) called for an Airbnb moratorium. Several neighborhoods (Alfama, Mouraria, Bairro Alto) no longer have bakeries. They have six pastel de nata shops for tourists.
The middle-class Brazilian arriving in 2026 lands in a place where they are simultaneously welcome (they consume, speak Portuguese, pay rent in advance) and resented (a daily reminder of those who were pushed out). It's not open hostility. It's a vibe.

About the author
Curadoria Voyspark
2 years in the Voyspark editorial team
Time editorial da Voyspark — escritores, repórteres, fotógrafos e fixers em Lisboa, Tóquio, Nova York, Cidade do México e Marrakech. Coletivo. Sem voz corporativa. Cada peça com checagem cruzada por um editor regional e um chef ou curador local.
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