Just before I bought my house in Portugal almost ten years ago, I was sitting next to an old Portuguese man on a flight out of Lisbon. When he asked what I was doing in Portugal, I told him: looking for a house, some property to buy. He suddenly looked at me hard, took a good grip on my forearm with one hand, and pointed at me with the other. “Now’s the time to buy in Portugal! Now! Do it! Buy now!” That was early 2013.
My plan wasn’t to “retire” in Portugal the way other Americans, and non-Americans alike, think about retirement: something like evenings out on the veranda, entertaining friends after a round of golf or a day of fishing with little more to do, or think about. No, I just wanted somewhere to live, a place I could afford with the very little money I had, and no mortgage in mind.
So, after a couple of trips within the same year to look at a variety of properties onsite, I finally found what I was looking for: a sufficiently habitable old farmhouse on a small plot twenty minutes’ drive from Coimbra with two floors, two bedrooms, one full bathroom, combined kitchen/living room, and a walled garden. I negotiated with the nice old British couple down from €50,000 to €43,000, and that was it. With my skills as a carpenter and a Portuguese friend, the house has since improved and expanded over the recent years for a mere pittance. Needless to say, the housing market landscape in Portugal, as well as the demographics, has since been changing dramatically.
Under the radar
One of the things that I found most appealing about Portugal at the time was that most people (besides the Brits who’ve pretty much been trying to keep the place under their hat since the Windsor Treaty of 1386) were hardly interested in it at all, especially Americans.
As a matter of fact, not many wanted to come to Portugal for much of anything really. As tourist hotspots go, Portugal didn’t even make the top 30 most popular countries for Americans to visit less than five years ago according to websites like ‘statisa.com’ and ‘loveexploring.com’. In terms of investment ideas, it was a “high risk” country, and very few considered it as a place to actually move to. The image of Portugal as the “backwater of Europe” was ensconced in the minds of many. Portugal was furthermore part of the EU “PIG” countries (Portugal, Ireland/Italy, Greece), which were in economic turmoil, terribly in debt, and crippled by stringent austerity measures. To the better-regarded EU members, and to that of America, these under-performing countries were akin to that “special needs” classroom of students you walked by in public school and wondered what their problem might be in relation to everyone else. In short, it was my kind of place: the marginalized kid few wanted to hang out with was always the one I gravitated to. The popular jocks and prom queens never carried much social intrigue for me.
In a nutshell, the height of the Portuguese financial crisis occurred from 2010 to 2014, which was part of the wider downturn of the Portuguese economy that started in 2001 and ended between 2016-17. Twenty years ago, growth stalled in Portugal as a result of internal economic crisis, which was exacerbated by the “Great Recession” that hit the country in 2008. Unable to repay or refinance its government debt, Portugal applied for bailout programs from the IMF, EFSM, and EFSF in April 2011 at the tune of 78 billion euro. However, with austerity discipline and good fiscal helmsmanship, Portugal exited the bailout in 2014, the same year positive economic growth reappeared after three years of recession.
By 2016, the Socialist government achieved a 2.1% budget deficit, which was the lowest since the restoration of democracy in 1974, and the next year saw the highest growth rate of the economy by 2.7% since 2000 when the nightmare first began to unfold.
Celebrity star
Since 2018, Portugal has not only made a comeback, but has become somewhat of a celebrity star everyone wants a selfie with, the most coveted, talked about place in Europe to see and.… to move to. The quiet, shy kid in the corner of the playground has grown up to be the man everyone wants to shake hands with.
Americans don’t like to be associated with losers. They like a trend that comes with a bit of a guarantee. They’ll have sympathy for an underdog they don’t really know, but won’t wear the colors until they see a winning streak; and risk-taking is sadly no longer part of the American character it once was.
Following the worse of the financial crisis years in Portugal, the Americans that were living in Portugal at the time began an exodus out, and from 2013 to 2016, the numbers of Americans decreased along with some other foreign residents as well.
2015 was the lowest ebbing point for Portugal regarding immigration, and Americans were the smallest demographic of foreigners in terms of numbers on record to not be moving to Portugal for anything like a better quality of life and more opportunity. This is in contrast to other countries, such as Brazil, the UK, Cape Verde, Romania, Ukraine, Italy, and even China, that have had long-term relationships with Portugal. The citizens of those countries have been consistently patient in the face of Portugal’s economic adversity, and still respectively represent the most residents by demographic number from foreign countries living in Portugal today.
Rags to riches
Americans currently rank 25th, but that could be changing the way things are going as the number of Americans moving to Portugal more than doubled from 2020 (1,115) to 2021 (2,477), and almost quadrupled since 2018 (714) based on new residence permits issued. According to the statistical information, there were 6,921 Americans living in Portugal in 2021 as opposed to only 2,426 in 2013 when I got my proverbial foot in the door.
One could say it’s precisely something like Portugal’s resurrection that Americans have been desperately looking for; a feel-good, rags-to-riches story they can gather around and be part of.
For the most part, America has become a broken country for its citizens, on the verge of becoming what appears to be a downright failed state for many. Income earnings and wages have not kept pace with the exorbitant cost of living that has been ever on the rise. Housing has become untenable for most Americans whether trying to buy, or merely rent. The approximate cost of a home in the San Diego area in 1996 for example was $300,000. The same house would sell for $1,288,994 on the given market calculated for 2021.
Rents in the larger metropolitan areas of the U.S. for an average apartment are anywhere between $4,000-$5,000 a month (This, as opposed to monthly rent in the very heart of Lisbon for about $1,100 in comparative dollar amount). And then there’s the healthcare system, which really isn’t a “system” for healthcare at all as much as it’s a big for-profit business that most Americans don’t want to have to use in any way for fear of losing any savings they have, or going into serious debt. Indeed, the great majority of Americans are just barely surviving. The response of many to these circumstances can be seen on websites like ‘InternationalLiving.com’, where the traffic on their “How to move out of the US” page jumped to 1,676% between June and November 2021 alone. According to Internal Revenue Service records, more than 6,000 Americans actually gave up their citizenship in 2020 (compared to 2,072 in 2019), the highest figure in at least a decade.
Influx of Americans
As a direct result of all this, the influx of Americans into Portugal is of two types: older Americans who are retiring and want to get the most out of their savings, and a younger crowd, the so-called “Millennials”, who recently discovered new opportunities and a lifestyle in Portugal that America appears to no longer offer.
Generational differences aside, the shared appeal Portugal has for these Americans is the cost of living, a better quality of life, an advanced medical health care system that works, a moderate climate, tax incentives, and … the growing American expat community itself with which they can all identify as part of a group of “intrepid” individualists who are “breaking the mold” with a mutually shared sense of “adventure”. That’s the way Americans tend to think anyway. However, the local impact these two groups have on the Portuguese and how they’re affecting the economy is where they start to diverge. Indeed, the effect each of these generations of Americans is imparting on Portugal is different, and not all of it is good.
Golden visas
Attracting foreigners was part of the plan to help Portugal rise out of its recession and austerity in the early part of the 2010s.
When Portugal started its Golden Visa Program in 2012, it had issued 734 Golden Visas by 2014 that generated more than 440 million euros. The Chinese were the first out of the gate to grab onto Portugal’s Golden Visa Program. By 2018, the number of Golden Visas issued went up to 6,498 with the top recipients being the Chinese at 3,963; followed by 581 Brazilians, 259 South Africans, 236 Turks, and 227 Russians according to an Economic and Trade-Cooperation website. At that time, the Americans weren’t showing themselves as a high-net worth consideration for Portugal. Now, however, with their sudden arrival on the scene, the recipient Golden Visa demographics are changing.
Americans are now competing evenly with the Chinese for residency. Chinese investors currently are still first in Golden Visa applications, but are slowly being overtaken by Americans. More Americans than ever received residency rights with Portugal’s Golden Visa Program in 2021. In November of 2021, Americans took the #1 spot, and in the next month of December, the Chinese just barely retook the spot with a 14 to 13 approval over the Yanks.
Benefits for Portugal?
This, of course, is good news for Portugal’s real estate industry, the Portuguese Securities Market Commission, as well as the Ministry of Finance, but the more working-class, or low- and average-income, Portuguese are not necessarily benefitting from the Golden Visa Program themselves. In fact, they’re rather being economically marginalized by the inflation of property values it’s creating. Essentially, many Portuguese feel that the money being brought into the country by even more recipients of the Golden Visa Program is just for the benefit of the “rich people” themselves, and not for the average Portuguese at the local level.
On the popular “Americans & FriendsPT” Facebook page, where Americans share information, cultural sentiments, ideas, good feelings, as well as even complaints about Portugal, one American vented her frustrations about the paperwork involved regarding the four properties she recently bought in Portugal. Stories like this give me pause to think of the benefits my fellow Americans are bringing to the Portuguese as some move in and take more than they need.
These Golden Visa Americans are not, of course, part of the newer generation of Americans making their way into the fabric of the unfolding Portuguese foreigner scene. The Millennial crowd of younger Americans can’t afford a Golden Visa. However, they’re a resourceful and skillful group within this world of digital tech that dominates the job market world-wide, and they’ve recently discovered that Portugal is the new, hip place to be.
“California of Europe”
Whether or not these younger Americans could actually locate Portugal on a map ten years ago is beside the point. However, I’m sure that the notion of Portugal being considered by some as the “California of Europe” might have something to do with it, and the fact that most Portuguese of this same generation speak English makes it easier for these younger Americans to acclimate as they move within the circles of their own age group.
Indeed, Portugal, particularly Lisbon where these younger Americans are congregating, is getting known for its “startup” scene, especially in the tech industry. Funding to startups headquartered in Lisbon reached almost 181 million euros in 2021, and 33% of founders for these startups are non-Portuguese according to a Portugal Startup Outlook Report.
These younger Americans are now looking for a place at this banquet table in order to dive into the opportunities that are up for grabs. And who can blame them really? However, a more relevant question that should be asked is at what cost to the Portuguese are these young upstart, startup entrepreneurs attempting to settle into the urban fabric of Portugal’s capital city? One only needs to prudently look at what happened to San Francisco in the decade and a half when it radically changed after 2000 as a possible analogy for what may lie in store for Lisbon.
San Francisco sprang up from the 1849 Gold Rush when opportunistic Americans flocked west in droves to mine its newly discovered gold. After all the gold that was once abundant in the northern California hills and streams was depleted, San Francisco eventually settled into an identity famed not for business, but as a bohemian place, known for its artistic and counter-culture lifestyle. This all changed after its rebirth in the 2000s with the new Tech Boom Gold Rush that irrevocably changed the city into something almost unrecognizable from what it once was.
Startups, not unlike those occurring in Lisbon now, transformed San Francisco from a reasonably affordable city where locals and their families lived for generations to a place where they could no longer afford the suddenly pricey neighborhoods, the exorbitant cost of commercial and/or residential property to rent, much less own. Many people who identified with San Francisco as their home, the place they were born and raised, had to move as they were economically cleansed out. The trend continued into the 2010s as the rising cost of living in San Francisco forced out the city’s teachers, artists, small businesses, as well as ethnic diversity, to be replaced by computer engineers, startup companies, and the more financially secure “1%” that were drawn by the tech boom. The effects of this sudden inflationary change in the cost of living soon began to ripple out and adversely impact smaller parochial areas in the wider San Francisco Bay Area where even more local residents had to move out because of the rising cost of the so-called gentrification imposed on once affordable communities by a younger generation of more ambitiously successful entrepreneurs.
The Lisbon comparison
This combination of a booming economy with little housing development became a uniquely extreme and damaging situation, and the seeds of this same trend are beginning to be seen in Lisbon now. However, the players in this particular drama are not solely young native Portuguese nationals moving in from the countryside with plans for a better life, but foreigners, a growing number of them young Americans, moving in from across the ocean with plans of a better life outside of their own national borders.
Depending on who you talk to, some see Lisbon as getting a new lease on life and the result of foreign residents coming in is a better city, more career and social mobility, jobs, and better quality real estate emerging from “dying” neighborhoods. However, others are seeing many locals and small businesses being priced out with rising rents as many Portuguese have to close with new foreigners building new ventures. While neighborhoods are being transformed into startup districts for new businesses, much of old Lisbon is being stripped away, and according to one executive for a European sales company, many Portuguese, especially before the pandemic when tourism was booming, were already fed up with what’s been happening to the city.
More than economics
This is not just an economic issue, but a spiritual one, a cultural one. What’s the price of change as a more laidback, purely Portuguese lifestyle, a rich cultural identity, and formerly entrenched ways of making a living give way to a growing economy based on foreign entrepreneurship? Such a freelance economy takes the form of social Darwinism as teachers, municipal workers, small business owners of native-born Portuguese descent have to take on new jobs as baristas, waiters, and Uber drivers to service this new influx of foreign “landed gentry” in order to stay in the neighborhoods they grew up in.
The late American poet, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, an icon of Bohemian art and life who came to San Francisco in 1951, later complained of the “soulless people” newly inhabiting his city, a “new breed” busy on their laptops and iPhones with a knack for business occurring in places other than the one in which they happen to standing at the moment. One can only wonder what the Lisbon-born poet Fernando Pessoa would think if he could see the place his beloved city is rapidly changing into.
Needless to say, it would be both unfair and inaccurate to throw all the blame, or the credit, on the dramatic transformation that Portugal is undergoing these days solely on newly arriving Americans. However, to be honest, it’s difficult to remember (if at all) the positive impact large numbers of Americans have had on any place outside of their own borders.
Personally, if I had wanted to be anywhere among Americans at all, I would’ve stayed in America. Be that as it may, one can only hope that Portugal and the Portuguese will influence the Americans more than they’ll influence the Portuguese in any way.
Generally speaking, the attention span that Americans have for anything isn’t very long, and their interest in most things doesn’t have profound longevity. They have a tendency to get bored quickly with most things. Whether or not they’ll stay in Portugal, or for how long, is something only the future will tell.
Thanks Stephen, very detailed and historically relevant article that explains the trajectory and why Portugal was considered the #1 tourist destination many times starting in 2017 when I first visited Lisbon & Porto. For one who lived in LA and San Francisco in the 70's and Miami since the 90's I respect a beautiful country and it's people when I see it. I am coming to Porto to buy a condo, learn to speak Portuguese and contribute with my time for Animal Welfare projects AND I'm very excited. The US is going down, so much disrespect, guns, liars on TV and basically a dictatorship government coming soon, it's really sad. Portugal I'm certain also has it's pitfalls but nothing like the negativity here; I find it refreshing yes like the "California of Europe." I think Americans will be respectful of the Portuguese because of what they have experienced in the US; let's hope :)
By Wes from USA on 20 Apr 2022, 02:44
The NZ of the northern hemisphere. NZ was once a very affordable place to move to, but now it is afflicted by huge house prices and wages that refuse to keep pace. The policy of stimulation has not worked there, and will sow the same crop for Portugal in a few years.
By Ian from Other on 20 Apr 2022, 06:27
Most of them will demand Portugal to become more American, bringing more American "restaurants" - this is not food - and retail (meaning more junk made in China). The UK has allowed them to turn it into a mini US and they will try to do the same here instead of respecting the culture which they moved to, by choice I might add. I am waiting patiently for them to get bored and leave. And yes, I am American, here through family reunification not the golden visa.
By AB from Porto on 20 Apr 2022, 10:07
Yawn, a vanity article written by a self hating American. Parabéns on your superiority complex.
By John from USA on 20 Apr 2022, 10:29
My deepest appreciation to you for this article. Your perspective, your tone, your words and your restraint are such clear reflections of the reality of the US hoardes coming to Portugal. We arrived 12 years ago to a profoundly different place. I am part of the leadership team at Americans & FriendsPT and rejoice in the influx of families and entrepreneurs while cringing at the retirees getting passports for the first time, being unable to find toothpaste, complaining because their freshly prepared meal took 20 minutes to arrive. I hope, fervently hope, that you are correct and that the American attention span wanes soon.
By Susan Korthase from Lisbon on 20 Apr 2022, 14:57
My deepest appreciation to you for this article. Your perspective, your tone, your words and your restraint are such clear reflections of the reality of the US hoardes coming to Portugal. We arrived 12 years ago to a profoundly different place. I am part of the leadership team at Americans & FriendsPT and rejoice in the influx of families and entrepreneurs while cringing at the retirees getting passports for the first time, being unable to find toothpaste, complaining because their freshly prepared meal took 20 minutes to arrive. I hope, fervently hope, that you are correct and that the American attention span wanes soon.
By Susan Korthase from Lisbon on 20 Apr 2022, 14:57
It's all about socialist politics isn't it? Places like California and now Portugal don't allow much new building, impose bureaucracy and endless planning rules, thereby increasing the house prices to astronomical levels. I'm thinking of leaving because of this.
By Michael Blesh from Algarve on 20 Apr 2022, 17:32
I find this article and the opinions of the writer quite repugnant. I have been an American living in Portugal since 2007, and to equate what is happening with Portugal economically as "Social Darwinism" is, to me reflective of the author's lack of knowledge about the awful, unscientific, genocidal underpinnings of this destructive and small minded term. Darwin NEVER used or coined the term, it was a bigoted Englishman by the name of Herbert Spenser who came up with it, and it has no foundation whatsoever in science, logic, or reason. One need look no further than those who have parroted this term over history (Hitler, among them) in order to observe the injury which men have bestowed upon each based upon this absurd term. It is dehumanizing and demeaning, to say the least, and to somehow draw an analogy to modern day Socialist governed Portugal, to me, is the height of American arrogance on the part of the writer.
Also, I am from California, and I do not se how one can equate or compare a state of nearly 40,000,000 people to a country of almost 11,000,000. I enjoyed some of the writer's opinions, but overall, I find the article full of misrepresentations and hyperbole, aka B.S.
By Clifford Garoupa from Beiras on 20 Apr 2022, 17:58
When are we going to reach that day where the word "Americans" will stop being used to call the people who lives in the united states? America = Continent. Americans = people who lives in the continent America. Stop thinking of being the centre of the world (luckily you are not). Is like if we refer all the time to french people as "europeans" and make statements for the hole Europe just considering France! Come on!
By Nicolas from Lisbon on 20 Apr 2022, 22:07
What an arrogant, sad and bigoted article, from an American that immigrated to Portugal. Apparently he does not consider himself part of the “invasion” for reasons he never mentions.. perhaps because he now feels he came prior to the “influx” he is immune from such criticism, or that he somehow does not qualify for his description of Americans that bore easily and have short attention spans. He throws water on the perception of the Portuguese as kind and welcoming people. Argue as he might, the world belongs to everyone and people throughout history have migrated from one culture to another and each culture has changed slowly over time as a result; be that for better or worse. Despite his step back and denials, he will always be, as he described, an “invading” American.. no matter how long one lives in a country, if you weren’t born there, you can’t erase where you came from.
By Mark from USA on 23 Apr 2022, 16:56
Oh good grief, these kinds of attacks on the inevitable changes in cities are silly. Portuguese have been moving to the US for generations, including my forebears who moved to California from the Azores. Now a small number of Americans are heading the other way. This is not a "spiritual crisis". No culture is static. You cannot freeze any place in time. "Old Lisbon" was itself once new. The movement of people around the world is a wonderful enriching of our lives, and ought to be celebrated. The amount of panic that people have about changing demographics and gentrification is overblown and ignores history. For the record, I lived in San Francisco before the tech boom - all of the problems people complain about now were around then too.
By Paul from Lisbon on 04 Jun 2022, 19:28
This is such as exaggeration. There's 6000 or so Americans in Portugal... out of 11 million people. I doubt we're making a dent in the local economy or culture. Besides, most Americans moving here are probably not moving in the lesser expensive rentals where many Portuguese live. Renting more expensive units hardly displaces the average local population. And buying a property benefits the seller and doesn't cause significant pressure on rents. If rental units are converted to Airbnb, then that reduces supply and puts pressure on rents, but some American buying a property can only be beneficial, especially if the seller lives and spends the money in Portugal.
By Robert from Lisbon on 11 Jul 2022, 16:55
I am pursuing the Golden Visa and citizenship in Portugal. As somebody who has watched (and admittedly benefitted from) the skyrocketing prices of housing and the rapid gentrification in the SF Bay Area over the past decade, appeals more to me to invest in a commercial property or business than residential real estate. We have seen what foreign real estate investors and short term rental operations have done to cities like Paris. I first visited Lisbon almost 20 years ago, and found it enchanting then; visiting a few weeks ago, I hardly heard Portuguese spoken. I agree with you that the character is under threat and there need to be interventions to preserve it. But that won't and shouldn't keep the Americans away.
As a fifth generation Californian, I hate to think about leaving this outpost of natural beauty and cultural diversity (including the influence of Portuguese immigrants!) But the reality is that it is still part of the declining USA. One recent morning I awoke to find that I have been stripped of the reproductive rights I had enjoyed my entire life. Will there be a day soon when I wake up to find that my federal rights as an LGBT person are also gone? Many Americans feel powerless to make change in a political system that is owned outright by corporate interests. We don't see a progressive agenda ever advancing. We're done.
For this and many other reasons I have been considering a move to Europe for some time. Spain or France would have been my choice, but the enticement of citizenship in 5 years tips the balance for Portugal. Such policies demonstrate that they do want us, our money, and our way of doing business and are attracting some of our best and brightest. It's a net positive for PT.
By Sarah from USA on 16 Jul 2022, 00:12