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It's crowded and expensive, but still beautiful.
Rent matches major EU cities (€1,000-€1,800/month for 1-bedroom), tourist areas feel commercialized, and locals are frustrated by overcrowding. But the weather's incredible, food scene is world-class, and there's genuine history everywhere.
If you're visiting for 1-2 weeks, absolutely worth it—just avoid peak summer. If you're relocating long-term, Porto offers ~30% lower costs with similar charm. Lisbon works great for a visit, but living there requires either a solid budget or accepting trade-offs.
Yes, it's a real crisis.
Rents have doubled since 2021, and locals are being pushed out of the city. If you're relocating permanently, you're part of a complex problem—not the only cause, but contributing. Many Portuguese reviews say “please don't come.”
If this concerns you, consider Porto (less impacted), smaller Portuguese towns, or other countries entirely. If you're just visiting for weeks/months, the impact is less, but be mindful of using apartment-hotels over long-term Airbnbs.
Best areas: Chiado/Baixa (central, walkable, touristy), Príncipe Real (upscale, creative), Cais do Sodré (nightlife, trendy), Santos (up-and-coming, less touristy), Arroios (local feel, central but affordable).
Avoid for long stays: Heavy tourist zones get exhausting.
For families/relocators: Consider suburbs like Cascais (beach town, ~30min from center) or areas near metro lines outside downtown for better value and space.
Very easy.
Metro, trams, buses all work well. €43/month Navegante pass gives unlimited rides. The famous yellow trams help with the steep hills. Uber/Bolt are cheap and everywhere.
Walking is great in central areas, though hills can be brutal. You don't need a car in Lisbon itself, but having one opens up day trips to Sintra, Cascais, and beyond.
Best: March-June or September-October—pleasant weather, fewer crowds, lower prices.
Avoid: July-August (packed with tourists, expensive, hot).
Winter (Nov-Feb) is mild but rainy, usually cheaper and quieter. If you're relocating, arrive outside peak season to find housing easier and get better deals.
Lisbon: Bigger, more cosmopolitan, better international connections, beaches nearby, vibrant nightlife, larger expat community. More expensive and touristy.
Porto: ~30% cheaper, more authentic, beautiful architecture, slower pace. Colder, grayer winters.
Many people visit both—they're only ~3 hours apart by train.
Tight: €1,500-2,000 (room in shared flat €500-700, groceries €300, eating out sparingly, public transport €43).
Comfortable: €2,500-3,500 (1-bedroom €1,000-1,800, regular dining out, activities, utilities ~€150).
Higher end: €4,000+ (central apartment, dining out freely, travel).
Groceries and transport are reasonable, but rent drives costs up significantly.