Sociodemographic Profile of Portugal (2024-2026)

1. Population Overview

This document provides a comprehensive overview of Portugal's demographic landscape relevant to the January 2026 presidential election.


Basic Demographics (2025)

Metric Value Source
Total Population ~10.4 million Worldometers
Registered Voters ~10.9 million Statista
Foreign Residents 1.54 million (14%+) OECD
Median Age 46.8 years Worldometers
Fertility Rate 1.44 children/woman Worldometers

Population Trajectory

Portugal faces significant demographic challenges:

  • Below-replacement fertility (1.44 vs 2.1 needed)
  • Rapidly aging population - median age increased 21.7 years since 1950
  • Population growth only through immigration - native population declining
  • Brain drain - 2.3 million Portuguese (23%) live abroad

2. Voter Demographics

Age Distribution of Registered Voters

Age Group Share Characteristics
18-29 ~15% Brain drain candidates, housing crisis, digital natives
30-44 ~22% Family formation, career establishment, mortgage stress
45-49 Peak Most abundant voter cohort, established careers
50-64 ~24% Pre-retirement, healthcare concerns, property owners
65+ ~25% Pensioners, healthcare dependent, traditional values

Key insight: The median voter is older than the median citizen, amplifying representation of senior perspectives.

Regional Distribution

Region Registered Voters % of Total Key Characteristics
Lisboa ~2.4 million ~22% Urban, diverse, cosmopolitan, housing crisis
Norte ~2.8 million ~26% Industrial, traditional, PSD stronghold
Centro ~1.7 million ~16% Mixed, interior depopulation, agricultural
Alentejo ~0.4 million ~4% Rural, aging, agricultural, depopulated
Algarve ~0.35 million ~3% Tourism-dependent, housing crisis, expats
Açores ~0.2 million ~2% Island autonomy, high poverty, isolation
Madeira ~0.2 million ~2% Island autonomy, tourism, emigration
Diaspora ~1.6 million ~15% Europe + rest of world circles

3. Education Levels

Educational Attainment (Adult Population)

Level Approximate % Political Implications
Less than Secondary ~45% Higher in rural areas, older cohorts
Secondary Complete ~25% Mixed backgrounds
Higher Education ~30% Urban concentrated, emigration-prone

Key patterns:

  • Strong urban-rural education gap
  • Generational education gap (younger = more educated)
  • Brain drain concentrates among university graduates (40% emigrate)

Education and Voting Patterns

Research suggests:

  • Higher education correlates with left-liberal voting
  • Lower education correlates with populist voting
  • But relationship is mediated by economic security

4. Employment Structure

Employment by Sector (2024)

Sector % of Employment Trends
Services ~70% Growing, includes tourism
Industry ~24% Declining, northern concentration
Agriculture ~6% Declining, interior concentration

Employment Status

Status % Key Concerns
Employed (stable) ~55% Cost of living, housing
Employed (precarious) ~15% Job security, benefits
Unemployed ~6.3% Opportunity, dignity
Retired ~22% Pensions, healthcare
Student ~5% Future prospects, emigration decision

Wage Context

  • Average annual salary: ~€20,000
  • Minimum wage: €820/month (2024)
  • Significant wage gap with Northern Europe drives emigration

5. Housing Tenure

Housing Status

Status % of Population Key Issues
Homeowner (outright) ~45% Often older, inherited property
Homeowner (mortgage) ~30% Interest rate sensitivity
Renter (market) ~15% Rent crisis, displacement
Social housing ~2% Waiting lists, quality
Living with family ~8% Young adults locked out of market

Housing crisis data:

  • 16.3% annual property price increase (2025)
  • 43.4% of residents cite housing as main problem
  • Lisbon and Porto particularly affected

6. Religious Landscape

Religious Affiliation

Affiliation % of Population Political Tendency
Catholic (nominal) ~80% Broad spectrum
Catholic (practicing) ~19% More conservative
No religion/Secular ~15% More progressive
Evangelical/Other Christian ~3% Growing, includes immigrants
Other religions ~2% Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist (immigrants)

Key dynamics:

  • Rapid secularization, especially among youth
  • Urban-rural religiosity gap
  • Evangelical growth linked to Brazilian immigration
  • Chega draws support from religious conservatives (67.9% religious identity)

7. Ethnic & National Origin

Native vs Foreign-Born

Category Population % of Total
Native Portuguese ~8.9 million ~86%
Foreign-born residents ~1.54 million ~14%

Foreign Resident Communities (2024)

Origin Number % of Foreigners Integration Level
Brazil 485,000 31.4% High (language, culture)
PALOP countries* 259,000 16.8% High (colonial ties)
India/Nepal 254,000 16.5% Lower (recent, language barrier)
UK 45,000+ ~3% Moderate (Brexit complications)
Ukraine 30,000+ ~2% Emerging (war refugees)
Other EU 150,000+ ~10% High (EU rights)

*PALOP = Angola, Cape Verde, Guinea-Bissau, Mozambique, São Tomé and Príncipe

Voting Rights by Nationality

Category Voting Rights Requirements
Portuguese citizens All elections Automatic registration
EU citizens European + municipal Registration
Brazilian citizens Municipal only 2 years residence
Cape Verdean citizens Municipal only 2 years residence
Some Latin American* Municipal only 3 years residence
Other foreigners None Naturalization required

*Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Peru, Uruguay, Venezuela

Critical statistic: Only 3.3% of foreign residents (34,165) were registered to vote in 2024.


8. The Portuguese Diaspora

Emigration Scale

Metric Value
Portuguese living abroad 2.3 million (23% of population)
Young Portuguese abroad (15-39) 850,000 (30% of cohort)
University graduates who emigrate 40%
Youth (15-35) who emigrated 2008-2023 360,000

Main Destination Countries

Country Portuguese Population Characteristics
France ~600,000 Historic migration, working class
Switzerland ~300,000 Economic migrants, professionals
UK ~200,000 Post-2008 crisis, professionals
Germany ~150,000 Growing destination
Brazil ~150,000 Reverse migration, professionals
USA ~100,000 Historic + recent
Canada ~50,000 Growing
Luxembourg ~100,000 High per capita

Diaspora Voting Impact

In the May 2025 legislative elections:

  • 347,932 valid postal ballots returned
  • Diaspora votes gave Chega 2 additional seats
  • Diaspora historically leans PSD (center-right)

9. Generational Divides

Key Generational Cohorts

Generation Birth Years Age in 2026 Defining Experiences
Silent/Early Boomers 1930-1945 81-96 Salazar dictatorship, emigration to France
Revolution Generation 1946-1960 66-80 Carnation Revolution 1974, EU accession
EU Generation 1961-1980 46-65 EU membership, modernization, stability
Crisis Generation 1981-1995 31-45 2008 crisis, troika, brain drain
Digital Natives 1996-2010 16-30 Housing crisis, climate anxiety, globalization

Generational Political Patterns

Generation Typical Concerns Political Tendency
Silent/Boomers Pensions, healthcare, stability PS/PSD traditional
Revolution Gen Democratic values, EU, social rights PS center-left
EU Generation Economic stability, careers PSD center-right
Crisis Generation Jobs, housing, precarity Variable, some Chega
Digital Natives Climate, values, emigration BE/Livre progressive

10. Socioeconomic Class Structure

Income Distribution

Quintile Share of Income Characteristics
Top 25% 48% of total income Upper-middle, professional
Middle 50% 42% of total income Working and middle class
Bottom 25% 10% of total income At-risk poverty

Poverty Indicators

Indicator Rate Context
General poverty risk 16.6% Below EU average
Elderly poverty risk 21.1% Above general population
Child poverty risk 18.5% Family concerns
Single-parent poverty 35%+ Gender dimension

11. Key Voter Segments for Persona Development

Based on this analysis, priority voter segments include:

Portuguese Voters by Region

  1. Greater Lisbon urban
  2. Greater Porto urban
  3. Northern industrial belt
  4. Interior rural (Alentejo, Trás-os-Montes)
  5. Algarve coast
  6. Islands (Azores, Madeira)

Portuguese Voters by Class/Situation

  1. Young professional (housing stressed)
  2. Public sector worker (healthcare, education)
  3. Precarious worker (services, tourism)
  4. Small business owner
  5. Industrial worker
  6. Agricultural worker
  7. Pensioner (various levels)
  8. Student/recent graduate

Portuguese Voters by Values

  1. Religious conservative
  2. Secular progressive
  3. Economic liberal
  4. Socialist/workers' rights
  5. Anti-establishment

Diaspora

  1. Emigrant in France
  2. Emigrant in Switzerland/UK
  3. Returned emigrant

Non-Voters (Affected Immigrants)

  1. Brazilian community
  2. PALOP community
  3. South Asian community
  4. Ukrainian refugees
  5. European expats

Sources

  1. Worldometers - Portugal Demographics 2025
  2. Statista - Registered Voters by Region
  3. Statista - Registered Voters by Age
  4. OECD - International Migration Outlook 2024: Portugal
  5. Euronews - Immigrant Voting Rights
  6. Portuguese American Journal - Diaspora Voting 2025
  7. The World - Brain Drain
  8. Wikipedia - Demographics of Portugal
  9. Wikipedia - Religion in Portugal