โPortugal is preparing to stop relying on European Union โ(EU) funds in the next long-term budget cycle โand become a net contributor, โconfident it can compete โ for project funding on merit,โ Prime Minister Luis Montenegro said.
“We are mobilising Portugal to โbe prepared, not to stand with an outstretched hand asking, โbut to present credible, ambitious, strong โprojects โ that can be selected โ on the basis of their merit,” he said at a conference late on Tuesday (May 12, 2026).
Portugal โhas received around โโฌ180 billion ($211 billion) in EU funds since joining in 1986, in constant 2021 prices, while contributing about โ50 billion euros, according to Bank โof Portugal data.
Mr. Montenegro said the EU’s next budget โ cycle would bring a more competitive funding system, with projects judged on merit and โtheir ability to scale companies globally. “This is not a process we should fear, but one we should take part in,” Mr. Montenegro said.
He said Portugal supported EU โcohesion policy, warning the bloc weakened without support โfor less developed economies, hurting both laggards and their economic โ partners.
The government forecasts a balanced budget โ this year, following a surplus of 0.3% of gross domestic โproduct in 2025, marking Portugal’s fourth consecutive year in the black. ($1 = โโฌ0.8523)
