Portugal has long since been a popular expat destination, but the Non-Habitual Residence (NHR) scheme has been instrumental in attracting new residents seeking a favourable tax regime.
NHR is a preferential tax status granted to new residents and lasts 10 years. However, the benefits of NHR are not automatic and you must plan to make the scheme work for your specific situation.
Pre-arrival planning
The ideal situation is to start looking at your finances before you move. This way you can identify any tax planning opportunities available in your home country that would otherwise not be available in Portugal and utilise any tax breaks and annual allowances.
From a UK context, for example, ISAs are tax-free in the UK but if you wait to surrender until after establishing residency in Portugal you will incur 28% tax on any gain (even with NHR).
NHR period planning
During NHR it is important to maximise the tax opportunities available, particularly the flat 10% rate on pension income and nil rate tax on foreign-sourced capital gains and income. It is also the opportune time to start thinking about how to structure your finances for when NHR comes to an end.