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D7- Apartment Requirement

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carolynivory1031

A tip for those applying for the D7 Visa.  You do need to have a Portuguese address, however, you will need to return to your home country while the Visa is being processed.  This can and will take several months.  Don't worry about finding the perfect apartment to apply for the D7 Visa.  Find the cheapest apartment because you will not be living in it.  When you return to Portugal, take your time find a place that you love.  Under Portuguese law you are only obligated for one third of the lease period.  So, sign up for  the 12 months for your Visa application and you can get out after 4 months and find a place that you really want to live in.


Sharing what I've learned after going through the process myself.  I wish someone had posted this for me last year :)


all the best of luck!


Carolyn

mariandsouza73

Thank you for sharing.

we2zebras

Great post, thanks Carolyn.  I got a two year lease and though I could cancel after a third of the period, I made it a half. I also stayed an additional three months after giving notice as per my lease.

laisadora31

I'm not sure I understand. If I apply for the Visa from MY country...I get the temporary Visa and go to Portugal Ok, so far so good.


Are you saying I MUST go back to MY country to get the 2 year visa afterwards????


Thanks


Helene

rspencerkeith

@laisadora31 no.  If you stay in your home country while you submit your visa application and get approved, you then can move to Portugal and are good for 120 days.  During that 120 days you will meet with SEF in Portugal to get approved for your 2 yr visa.  It is only if you you move to Portugal right after your VIsa appt in your home country but before getting the 120 day approval that you would need to fly back when it is approved to either send them your passport or pick up the passport you left with them.

donn25

No.  When you get the D7 visa, that's

  • the only one you apply for in the US, and
  • the only visa you get


After you arrive in Portugal, you will interview for a residence permit, título de residência.  That's good for two years, and then there are more applications to be made.


At any of these applications you will need proof of a residence in Portugal, but the issue really comes up only with the visa, since you'll be in the US for a good long time waiting for that visa to be issued.  And it may not be trivially easy for a foreigner to rent an apartment.


I don't think there's any really good solution.  Whether it's legal or not, signing a lease with the intention of breaking it doesn't really appeal to me, and if it's going to be common practice, that's certainly going to make it harder for foreigners to rent.


Places in Portugal don't entirely line up on a good to bad scale, and it might be possible to make a virtue out of necessity, by renting an apartment in a place you don't think you'd prefer, and letting that be part of the on-the-ground experience you need to make a good choice.  For example, I have a vague impression you might be able to get more value from your rent money in Viana do Castelo.  Not the average ex-pat's dream destination, but ... Friday it's supposed to be 96°F in Lisbon, and 82°F in Viana do Castelo.  So you want to live in Lisbon, but until your lease is up, you have a summer retreat up north.  Or maybe after living there a couple months, you come to like it better than Lisbon - weirder things have happened.

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