
Money, Safety & Getting Around in Portugal
Portugal's currency is the euro; cards are accepted almost everywhere, including small cafés, so there's little need to carry much cash. Lisbon and Porto both charge a nightly tourist tax (roughly €4 and €3 per person respectively as of 2026, capped after about a week), added at checkout or on arrival. Portugal is consistently ranked among the world's safer countries — the realistic risk is pickpocketing on crowded trams, not violent crime. Trains connect Lisbon and Porto in under 3 hours; a car is only worth renting for the Algarve or rural Douro Valley.
The practical questions that actually matter once you land: how to handle money (short answer: barely need cash), what the tourist tax adds to your bill, what's genuinely worth worrying about safety-wise, and the smartest way to get between cities without a rental car you don't need.
Money and tourist taxes
The euro (€) is the currency; contactless card payments work almost everywhere, from hotels down to small bakeries, so carrying large amounts of cash isn't necessary. Both Lisbon and Porto add a nightly municipal tourist tax on top of your hotel bill: Lisbon charges around €4 per person per night, Porto around €3, both typically capped after about a week's stay (so a longer visit doesn't keep accumulating charges indefinitely). It's usually collected at check-in or check-out, not baked into the advertised room rate — budget an extra few euros a night for it.
| Payment method | Where it works best |
|---|---|
| Contactless card | Nearly everywhere — hotels, restaurants, transit, even small cafés |
| Cash (euros) | Small markets, some rural areas, tipping |
| Mobile payment (Apple Pay/Google Pay) | Widely accepted alongside card terminals |
Is Portugal safe?
Very safe by global standards — Portugal is consistently ranked among the safer countries in the world for travelers, with low rates of violent crime. The realistic risk is petty theft: pickpocketing on crowded trams (Lisbon's Tram 28 is the best-known example) and in busy tourist squares. Keep bags zipped and in front of you in a crowd, and you're taking the same precaution a savvy local would.
The lower-stakes stuff worth knowing: overpriced 'tourist menu' restaurants directly on the most photographed squares (walk two streets back for better food at a lower price), unlicensed street vendors selling counterfeit goods (walk past, don't engage), and the same general crowd-awareness that applies in any major European city.
Getting around Portugal

High-speed and regional trains connect Lisbon and Porto in as little as 2 hours 45 minutes, run frequently, and are far less stressful than driving — book ahead for the cheapest fares (CP, Portugal's national rail operator, and the private Alfa Pendular service both run the route). Within Lisbon and Porto, walking plus metro/tram/bus covers almost everything a visitor needs. A rental car only really pays off for exploring the Algarve coast in depth or the rural Douro Valley at your own pace — parking in the historic centers of both major cities is genuinely painful, so pick the car up on your way out of the city, not before.
eSIM and staying connected
eSIM works well throughout Portugal and is the easiest option if your phone supports it — providers like Airalo and Holafly sell data-only Europe-wide plans from around €5–20 for a week or two, activated before you even land. A physical local SIM (Vodafone, NOS, or MEO, sold at the airport or any phone shop) costs similarly and is just as easy to set up on arrival.












































