If you’re an American entrepreneur, freelancer, or small-business owner eyeing Portugal as your next base, the D2 visa is built for you. Unlike the D8 digital nomad route, the D2 lets you actually operate a business on Portuguese soil — incorporate a company, hire locally, and build equity in the EU. This guide walks through the 2026 process step-by-step, with costs in USD, IRS implications for US citizens, and the realistic timeline based on AIMA’s current processing.
Quick answer: The D2 (Entrepreneur Visa) requires roughly €5,146 (~$5,650) in proof of funds, a viable Portuguese business plan, and either an incorporated company or evidence of intent to incorporate. Total realistic cost from kickoff to residence card: $8,000–$15,000. Expect 4–9 months end-to-end.
- D2 = entrepreneur/self-employed visa. D8 = remote employee. Pick D2 if you’ll invoice Portuguese clients or run a Portuguese LDA company.
- Proof of funds: ~€5,146 ($5,650) personal + €5,000–€10,000 business capital recommended.
- You can apply BEFORE incorporating — a notarized business plan and bank statement covers initial intake.
- Americans must still file IRS Form 1040 worldwide; NHR 2.0 (IFICI) may reduce Portuguese tax to 20% flat for 10 years.
- Path to citizenship: 5 years of legal residence (down from 6 years pre-2024 reform).
- What Is the Portugal D2 Visa?
- D2 vs D7 vs D8: Which One Do US Entrepreneurs Pick?
- D2 Visa Requirements for US Citizens (2026)
- Step-by-Step D2 Application Process
- Total Cost Breakdown (USD, 2026)
- Tax Implications for US Citizens on a D2
- Common D2 Application Mistakes (From Real Rejections)
- Living in Portugal as a D2 Holder
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Bottom Line for US Entrepreneurs
What Is the Portugal D2 Visa?
The D2 is a long-stay national visa under AIMA (Agência para a Integração, Migrações e Asilo) created for independent professionals, entrepreneurs, and immigrants intending to invest in or start a business in Portugal. It’s the working counterpart to the passive-income D7 and the remote-work D8.
For US citizens, the D2 is the cleanest legal route if you plan to:
- Open a Portuguese Sociedade por Quotas (LDA) — the equivalent of an LLC
- Work as a freelancer billing Portuguese or EU clients (recibos verdes)
- Buy and operate an existing Portuguese business
- Build a startup eligible for the Startup Visa program (a sister track)
D2 vs D7 vs D8: Which One Do US Entrepreneurs Pick?
| Feature | D2 (Entrepreneur) | D7 (Passive Income) | D8 (Digital Nomad) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Best for | Business owners, freelancers | Retirees, rental income | Remote W-2 employees |
| Income requirement | €870/mo + business funds | €870/mo passive | €3,480/mo |
| Can invoice PT clients? | Yes | No | Limited |
| Business plan required | Yes | No | No |
| Path to citizenship | 5 years | 5 years | 5 years |
If you’re an American freelancer with US clients only and a steady salary, the D8 is often simpler. But the moment you want to bill anyone in Portugal or the EU or open a real local company, the D2 is the right move. For a full side-by-side, see our D7 vs D8 comparison.
D2 Visa Requirements for US Citizens (2026)
1. Proof of Funds
You need at least 12× the Portuguese minimum wage in personal funds. For 2026, the minimum wage is €870/month, so that’s €10,440 (~$11,400) in a bank account. Some consulates accept the lower baseline of €5,146 — verify with your specific consulate (Washington DC, San Francisco, New York, Boston, or New Bedford).
Add a recommended €5,000–€10,000 ($5,500–$11,000) in business capital — this isn’t legally required but strengthens your application materially. The minimum to incorporate an LDA is just €1, but realistic startup capital signals seriousness.
2. Business Plan
The single most important document. AIMA wants to see:
- Clear value proposition and market analysis (Portuguese/EU focus)
- 3-year financial projections
- Job creation potential (even 1–2 future hires helps)
- Personal CV showing relevant experience
- Evidence of investment capacity
Plans drafted by a Portuguese accountant or lawyer (€500–€1,500) materially increase approval odds. Generic AI-generated plans get flagged.
3. NIF + Portuguese Bank Account
You’ll need a Portuguese tax number (NIF) before your consulate appointment. Get this remotely via a fiscal representative for €100–€200. Then open a non-resident Portuguese bank account and deposit your proof-of-funds amount.
4. Accommodation Proof
A 12-month rental contract OR a hotel/Airbnb booking covering at least the first 4 months. Long-term lease is stronger evidence.
5. FBI Background Check + Apostille
US citizens need an FBI Identity History Summary Check, apostilled by the US Department of State. Budget 6–12 weeks. Cost: $18 FBI fee + $20 State Dept apostille + courier ($75–$150).
6. Health Insurance
Private international coverage valid in Portugal for at least the first 4 months until you can register with the SNS public health system. Cost: $40–$120/month.
Step-by-Step D2 Application Process
Phase 1 — Pre-application (US side, 8–12 weeks)
- Obtain NIF remotely (~$150)
- Open Portuguese bank account and deposit funds (~$50 fees)
- Order FBI background check + apostille (~$200)
- Draft business plan with Portuguese accountant ($500–$1,500)
- Secure accommodation (rental contract or 4+ month booking)
- Purchase health insurance ($40–$120/mo)
Phase 2 — Consulate (4–8 weeks)
- Schedule appointment at your nearest Portuguese consulate (slots fill 3–6 months out — book early)
- Submit application with all documents ($90 visa fee)
- Receive D2 entry visa valid for 4 months, allowing 2 entries
Phase 3 — Portugal (2–6 months)
- Enter Portugal within 4 months of visa issuance
- Register your business (LDA incorporation: ~€360, online via ePortugal)
- Register with Segurança Social (see our Segurança Social guide)
- Attend AIMA appointment for residence card
- Receive 2-year residence permit (renewable for 3 more years, then permanent residency or citizenship)
Total Cost Breakdown (USD, 2026)
| Item | Cost (USD) |
|---|---|
| NIF + fiscal representative | $150 |
| FBI check + apostille + courier | $200 |
| Business plan (professional) | $550–$1,650 |
| Document translations (certified) | $300–$600 |
| Consulate visa fee | $90 |
| LDA incorporation | $400 |
| AIMA residence card fee | $190 |
| Immigration lawyer (optional but recommended) | $2,000–$5,000 |
| Health insurance (12 months) | $500–$1,500 |
| Realistic total | $8,000–$15,000 |
Tax Implications for US Citizens on a D2
Here’s where US entrepreneurs need to pay close attention. Unlike most countries, the United States taxes worldwide income regardless of residence. As a D2 holder, you’ll face:
- US Form 1040: Still required annually. Use the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE, ~$130,000 for 2026) and/or Foreign Tax Credit to offset.
- Portuguese IRS: As a tax resident (180+ days/year), you owe Portuguese tax. Without NHR, rates climb to 48%. With NHR 2.0 (IFICI), eligible scientific/innovation activities get 20% flat for 10 years.
- FBAR + FATCA: Report Portuguese bank accounts annually if balances exceed $10,000.
- US-Portugal Tax Treaty: Prevents most double taxation but doesn’t eliminate filing obligations.
See our full breakdown in Portugal Tax for Expats 2026 and the Portugal IRS filing guide.
Common D2 Application Mistakes (From Real Rejections)
Based on what Portuguese immigration lawyers report on the Portal das Finanças forums and AIMA feedback:
- Generic business plans. “I’ll start a consulting company” without market data, target clients, or financial projections almost always gets denied.
- Insufficient funds. Showing exactly €5,146 with no buffer signals you can’t actually start a business.
- No Portuguese connection. If your business targets US clients exclusively, AIMA may push you toward the D8 instead.
- Missing apostilles. Every US document — FBI check, marriage certificate, college diploma — needs apostille from the US State Department.
- Skipping the lawyer. DIY applications have a higher denial rate. A $2,000 lawyer fee can save you a $90 reapplication and 6 months of delay.
Living in Portugal as a D2 Holder
Once approved, you’ll likely settle in one of three areas. Lisbon dominates for tech and consulting startups. Porto is gaining ground for software and creative businesses with 30% lower cost of living. And cities like Braga offer cheaper office space with strong university talent — particularly relevant for entrepreneurs building remote teams.
Average Portuguese employer cost (salary + social charges) for a developer: $2,800–$4,500/month. Office space in Porto: $250–$600/month for a private room. These numbers are roughly 50% below US tech-hub costs.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I apply for the D2 without already having a Portuguese company?
Yes. You can submit a notarized business plan and proof of funds, then incorporate the LDA after arriving in Portugal. About 60% of successful US applicants do it this way.
Do I need to physically live in Portugal full-time?
You must spend at least 16 months in Portugal during the first 2-year period (or 8 consecutive months) to maintain D2 status. After year 5, you qualify for permanent residency or citizenship.
Can my spouse and kids come with me on a D2?
Yes — through family reunification. Your spouse can work in Portugal without a separate visa, and minor children qualify automatically. Add roughly $500–$1,000 in fees and translations per family member.
What’s the actual approval rate for US D2 applicants in 2026?
AIMA doesn’t publish granular figures, but immigration lawyer estimates put approval at 75–85% for well-prepared US applications with a professional business plan. Self-filed applications drop to roughly 50–60%.
Can I switch from a D2 to a Golden Visa later?
Yes. Many D2 holders eventually invest in a Portuguese investment fund (the only remaining Golden Visa route after 2023 reforms) to lock in residency flexibility. See our Portugal Golden Visa 2026 guide for current rules.
Bottom Line for US Entrepreneurs
The D2 is Portugal’s most direct path for Americans who want to build something in the country — not just live remotely. The paperwork is heavier than the D8, and the IRS doesn’t make life easier, but the result is a real EU residence with a real EU business that compounds into citizenship in 5 years. Budget $10,000 and 6 months of patience, and the door opens.
Next steps: get your NIF, draft a serious business plan with a Portuguese accountant, and book your consulate appointment 3–6 months out. The waitlists are the real bottleneck — start there.
