Last Updated: 2026-04-05
Portugal's IRS (Imposto sobre o Rendimento de Pessoas Singulares) is the country's personal income tax system, using 9 progressive brackets (escalões) ranging from 13.25% on the first €7,703 to 48% on income above €81,199. For Portuguese residents and most expats, understanding IRS is crucial—while the NHR regime ended in 2024 and IFICI is restrictive, the vast majority pay standard IRS rates.
This comprehensive guide explains Portugal's IRS tax brackets in 2026: the 9-tier escalão structure, how municipal surcharges (0-1.5%) and solidarity surcharges (2.5-5%) add to the base rate, standard deductions and allowances that reduce taxable income, the IRS filing process via Portal das Finanças, and how standard IRS compares to the former NHR and current IFICI regimes for those who don't qualify for special treatment.
Critical 2026 Update: IRS brackets remained unchanged from 2025, with no inflation adjustment. The top 48% rate applies above €81,199 (introduced in 2024, previously 45%). Municipal surcharges vary by location—Lisbon 1.5%, Porto 1.5%, smaller cities 0-1%. Most expats arriving in 2026 pay full IRS unless qualifying for IFICI (rare).
IRS uses 9 progressive income tax brackets (escalões in Portuguese), with rates from 13.25% to 48%.
| Bracket (Escalão) | Annual Income (€) | Tax Rate | Cumulative Tax |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Up to €7,703 | 13.25% | €1,021 |
| 2 | €7,704 - €11,623 | 16.50% | €1,668 |
| 3 | €11,624 - €16,472 | 22.00% | €2,735 |
| 4 | €16,473 - €21,321 | 25.00% | €3,947 |
| 5 | €21,322 - €27,146 | 32.00% | €5,811 |
| 6 | €27,147 - €39,791 | 35.50% | €10,300 |
| 7 | €39,792 - €51,997 | 43.50% | €15,609 |
| 8 | €51,998 - €81,199 | 45.00% | €28,750 |
| 9 | Over €81,199 | 48.00% | €28,750 + 48% above |
Gross Income: €30,000
IRS Calculation (Progressive Brackets):
Additional Charges:
Total IRS: €13,100
Municipal surcharge (1.5%): €635
Total tax: €13,735 (27.5% effective)
Net income: €36,265
Total IRS: €37,034
Municipal surcharge (1.5%): €1,384
Solidarity surcharge (2.5%): €500
Total tax: €38,918 (38.9% effective)
Net income: €61,082
Example: €200,000 income → 2.5% on €120,000 = €3,000 solidarity surcharge
Portugal offers various deductions that reduce your IRS taxable income.
Based on income type:
Gross income: €50,000
Deductions:
Total deductions: €8,106
Taxable income: €41,894
IRS before deductions: €13,100
IRS after deductions: ~€9,500 (27% reduction)
All Portuguese tax residents must file an annual IRS return (Declaração de IRS) through the Portal das Finanças.
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Get Travel Insurance →Portugal has 9 progressive IRS brackets (escalões) in 2026: 13.25% (up to €7,703), 16.5% (€7,704-€11,623), 22% (€11,624-€16,472), 25% (€16,473-€21,321), 32% (€21,322-€27,146), 35.5% (€27,147-€39,791), 43.5% (€39,792-€51,997), 45% (€51,998-€81,199), and 48% (above €81,199). Additionally, municipal surcharges (0-1.5%) and solidarity surcharges (2.5-5% for high earners) apply. Total effective rates: 24-40% for most residents.
On €50,000 gross income, you'd pay approximately €13,735 IRS (27.5% effective rate) including municipal surcharge, resulting in €36,265 net income. Breakdown: €13,100 progressive IRS + €635 municipal surcharge (1.5% in Lisbon/Porto). With standard deductions and family allowances, actual tax can be €2,000-€4,000 lower. Social security (11%) is additional, paid separately by employer and employee.
The IRS filing deadline is June 30 annually. Pre-filled returns become available April 1 via Portal das Finanças. You must file by June 30 to avoid penalties. The tax authority issues final assessments in July-August, with refunds/payments processed in September. Late filing incurs automatic penalties starting at €25 and increasing based on delay and income level. File early to receive refunds faster.
You can claim: health expenses (15% up to €1,000), education expenses (30% up to €800), housing costs—mortgage interest or rent (15% up to €502), pension contributions (20% up to €400), and donations (25% up to 15% of income). Additionally, you get automatic deductions: €4,104 standard deduction and employment-specific deduction (4%, max €1,000). Dependent children provide €600 each. Total deductions can reduce IRS by €2,000-€5,000 depending on expenses.
Yes, IFICI holders must still file an annual IRS return, but use the 20% flat rate section (Anexo J). The filing is simpler than standard IRS—you report employment income, apply the 20% rate, and cannot claim most standard deductions (health, education, etc.). You still benefit from the standard €4,104 deduction. File by June 30 via Portal das Finanças. IFICI doesn't exempt you from filing, just simplifies the calculation.
Portugal's IRS (13.25-48%) is moderate compared to Europe. Top rate (48% above €81k) is higher than Spain (47%), UK (45%), but lower than Belgium (50%), Denmark (56%), Sweden (52%). However, Portugal's top rate kicks in early (€81k vs. €277k in Germany, €145k in UK). With municipal and solidarity surcharges, total burden reaches 40-50% for high earners. Former NHR (0-10%) made Portugal attractive; standard IRS is now comparable to Spain/Italy.
The municipal surcharge is an additional 0-1.5% income tax levied by each municipality on income above €7,703. Rates vary: Lisbon 1.5%, Porto 1.5%, Faro 1.0%, smaller cities 0.5-1.0%. It's calculated on your taxable income after the first €7,703. Example: €50,000 income in Lisbon = 1.5% × €42,297 = €634 additional tax. This surcharge applies to everyone (standard IRS and IFICI), paid as part of your annual IRS bill.
Yes, married couples can choose joint filing (conjunto) or separate filing (separado) annually. Joint filing is usually better when: one spouse earns significantly more (progressive rates smooth out), you have children (double the deductions), or one spouse has no income (utilize their standard deduction). The Portal das Finanças calculates both scenarios and recommends the better option. You can switch between joint/separate each year depending on which minimizes total IRS.
Missing the June 30 deadline triggers automatic penalties: minimum €25 for filing 1-30 days late, increasing to €100+ after 30 days, up to €2,500+ for extended delays. You'll also owe 4% annual interest on unpaid tax. The longer you delay, the higher the penalty. If you realize you missed the deadline, file immediately to minimize penalties. Repeated late filing can lead to audits and additional scrutiny from Portuguese tax authorities.
Yes, Portuguese tax residents (183+ days in Portugal) pay IRS on worldwide income, including foreign employment, business income, rental income, and investment gains. You must report all foreign income on your IRS return. To avoid double taxation, claim foreign tax credits for taxes paid abroad under Portugal's tax treaties. Example: €50k Portuguese salary + €20k foreign consulting = IRS on €70k total. Keep foreign tax payment proof for credit claims.