Brazilian Citizenship for Portuguese-Speaking Nationals: the One-Year Route

If you’re a national of a Portuguese-language country โ Portugal, Angola, Mozambique, Cape Verde, Guinea-Bissau, Equatorial Guinea, São Tomé and Príncipe, or Timor-Leste โ Brazil offers you the shortest path to citizenship in its entire law: naturalization after one year of residence, with no Portuguese-language exam. And if you are specifically Portuguese, there’s a second option that can give you the rights of a Brazilian without giving up your Portuguese nationality. This page explains both, and how to choose.
Reviewed by Luciano Oliveira โ Brazil–US attorney
Também disponível em português โ para quem prefere ler em português.
This page is general information about Brazilian nationality law, not legal advice, and reading it doesn’t create an attorney–client relationship. Your situation turns on its own facts; only a consultation with a licensed attorney can confirm which option fits you.
Why this route is different
Most foreigners face a four-year residence requirement and a Portuguese-language exam to naturalize. Nationals of Portuguese-language countries do not. The Constitution itself (CF/88, art. 12, II, “a”) singles them out and asks for only two things. The reason they’re so light is worth stating: Brazil treats the shared language and history of the Lusophone world as already doing the work that residence time and a language test do for everyone else. So the law asks only for:
- One year of residence in Brazil, and
- Idoneidade moral โ good character (essentially, a clean record and no conduct that would disqualify you).
That’s it. There is no Portuguese-language exam (you’re presumed proficient), and Brazil’s Supreme Court (STF) has held that these two are the only formal requirements. You do not have to prove employment, income, or family ties. Once the year and good character are shown, this is close to a right to be recognized. The legal chain: CF art. 12, II, “a” (planalto), implemented by Decreto 9.199/2017, art. 237 (planalto).
A note on the one-year residence
The Constitution phrases the period as “one uninterrupted year.” In practice, the Ministry of Justice applies a proportional tolerance to short absences on one-year minimums (broadly, up to about three months of travel across the year) โ but because the constitutional wording is stricter here, it’s worth confirming your specific travel history rather than assuming. What matters most is that Brazil was genuinely your home for the year, not a nominal address.
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If you’re Portuguese: a second option โ the Equality Statute
Portuguese nationals have a choice the others don’t. Instead of naturalizing, you can apply for the Estatuto de Igualdade (Statute of Equality), which grants a Portuguese national resident in Brazil the rights of a Brazilian โ without becoming Brazilian and without giving up Portuguese nationality. It rests on CF art. 12, ยง1 and the Brazil–Portugal Treaty of Friendship (Decreto 3.927/2001), and it works in two levels:
- Equality of civil rights โ available to a Portuguese national with a residence permit in Brazil (reciprocity applies).
- Equality of political rights โ available after about three years of residence, on request; it lets you vote, within limits, while certain offices remain reserved for born Brazilians.
The practical decision: if your goal is a Brazilian passport and full nationality, naturalize (the one-year route above). If you’d rather keep your Portuguese nationality and simply live with the rights of a Brazilian, the Equality Statute may suit you better. They’re different tools for different goals, and we help Portuguese clients weigh them.
A caution: buying a Portuguese-speaking passport to qualify
Because this route turns on being a national of a Portuguese-language country, you may have seen a passport marketed as a shortcut to it โ most prominently São Tomé and Príncipe, which opened a citizenship-by-investment program in 2025. The pitch is simple: buy the passport, use it to obtain Brazilian residence as a CPLP national, then naturalize after a year. Before you spend anything, you deserve the honest legal picture.
The heart of the problem is a single constitutional word: originário. The one-year track is for those originating from a Portuguese-language country, and Brazilian law draws a firm line between nationality that is originária โ held by birth โ and nationality acquired later through naturalization. There is a strong argument that “originário” means the first kind, which would place someone who purchased their São Tomé nationality outside the one-year track altogether.
Just as important, this has never been tested. No Brazilian court and no Ministry of Justice guidance has decided whether an investment-citizen qualifies for the one-year route โ so anyone presenting it as a sure thing is, in the words of the passport industry’s own advisories, “ahead of the law.” Two realities discussed elsewhere on this page apply here with extra force: the year of residence must be genuinely lived in Brazil, not kept on paper, and it will generally make you a Brazilian tax resident on your worldwide income. And there is the interview: the presumption that a Portuguese-language national speaks Portuguese is exactly that โ a presumption โ so an applicant who cannot communicate in Portuguese invites fair questions about whether the route truly fits them.
None of this makes a São Tomé passport worthless; it is a real nationality with its own mobility benefits. It means the Brazilian one-year claim built on top of it is unproven and carries real risk, and we won’t tell you otherwise to make a sale. If you’re weighing it, we’ll give you a clear-eyed read on where the law actually stands and what a defensible plan looks like.
How naturalization works, and what it costs
Applications are filed through the government’s “Naturalizar-se” portal (gov.br), handled by the Ministry of Justice with an in-person step at the Polícia Federal. The government application is free. Timelines vary with the authorities’ workload; naturalization takes effect on publication in the Diário Oficial, after which you register with the electoral authority within a year. One honest cross-cutting note: genuinely residing in Brazil generally makes you a Brazilian tax resident on your worldwide income โ worth weighing.
Frequently asked questions
Which countries count as “Portuguese-speaking” for this route?
Portugal, Angola, Mozambique, Cape Verde, Guinea-Bissau, Equatorial Guinea, São Tomé and Príncipe, and Timor-Leste โ the Portuguese-language (CPLP) nations.
Do I really not have to take the Portuguese exam?
Correct. Nationals of Portuguese-language countries are exempt from the language-proficiency requirement that applies to the ordinary four-year route.
How long do I need to reside in Brazil?
One year. The Constitution says “uninterrupted,” and the Ministry of Justice applies a proportional tolerance to short trips on one-year minimums โ confirm your travel history with counsel.
Is this the same as the one-year route for spouses of Brazilians?
No โ that’s a different legal basis (a reduced ordinary naturalization for spouses/parents of a Brazilian). This route is the constitutional Portuguese-language-country track. Both happen to be one year.
Can I buy a São Tomé (or other CPLP) passport and use this one-year route?
Honestly, it’s unproven. The route is for those originating from a Portuguese-language country, and there’s a strong argument that “originário” means nationality by birth โ not a nationality bought by investment โ a question no Brazilian court or the Ministry of Justice has yet decided. Combined with the genuine-residence, tax, and language realities, it’s a real risk that some market as a sure thing. We’re glad to give you an honest assessment before you commit anything.
I’m Portuguese โ should I naturalize or use the Equality Statute?
It depends on your goal. Naturalization makes you Brazilian (passport, full nationality). The Equality Statute gives you a Brazilian’s rights while you keep Portuguese nationality. We help you choose.
Will I keep my original nationality if I naturalize?
Generally yes โ Brazil doesn’t require renouncing it, and since EC 131/2023 the dual-nationality rules are more generous. Your other country’s law governs its side.
Related routes
Ordinary Naturalization (the four-year route, for non-Lusophone nationals); One-Year Naturalization (spouse or Brazilian child โ a different basis); and the main Brazilian Citizenship guide.
A final note: this page is general information about Brazilian nationality law, not legal advice, and reading it creates no attorney–client relationship. Whether this route fits you — and how to pursue it — turns on your specific facts, which only a consultation with a licensed attorney can assess.

