Portugal Practical Travel Info
Visa rules by nationality, money, safety, and getting around.
Portugal is part of the Schengen Area, so entry rules depend on your passport: most non-EU Western nationalities (US, Canada, UK, Australia, New Zealand) get visa-free entry for up to 90 days within any 180-day period, with ETIAS pre-authorization (a €20, multi-year, all-Schengen digital permit) expected to become a hard requirement sometime in late 2026 or 2027. Currency is the euro; cards are widely accepted even for small purchases. Portugal is consistently ranked among the world's safer countries — the realistic risks are pickpocketing on crowded trams and in tourist areas, not violent crime.
The unglamorous section that actually saves your trip: whether you need a visa (short answer: it depends on your passport, and a new EU system is about to change the paperwork slightly), how to handle money, what's genuinely worth worrying about safety-wise, and how to get around once you land.

Portugal Visa & Entry Requirements (2026)
The real answer, broken down by passport — not one generic rule.

Money, Safety & Getting Around in Portugal
Cash, tourist taxes, real safety risks, and how to get between cities.












































