Portugal continues to position itself as an attractive platform for international investors seeking to develop projects in Europe — from tourism, real estate and industry to renewable energy, technology, healthcare and other strategic sectors.
However, transforming an opportunity into a viable investment project requires more than a good idea, an attractive location or a potential source of financing.
A successful project needs structure: a clear concept, a realistic implementation strategy, an appropriate corporate framework, regulatory alignment and a coherent financing plan.
Before incorporating a company, acquiring an asset, applying for public incentives or approaching banks and investors, it is essential to understand whether the project is legally viable, financially sustainable and operationally executable.
This article outlines the main stages involved in structuring an investment project in Portugal — from concept definition to financing and implementation.
Structuring an investment project means transforming an initial idea into a clear, credible and financeable plan.
In practice, this process organises the essential elements of the project: concept, market positioning, location, business model, corporate structure, licensing, risks, implementation plan and financing strategy.
The financing structure may combine several sources, including equity, public incentives, bank financing, private investors, investment funds or strategic partners.
A well-structured project should answer fundamental questions:
For international investors, this stage is particularly important because Portugal has specific rules regarding licensing, urban planning, taxation, incentives, financing and sector-specific requirements.
Investment structuring is therefore the bridge between an opportunity and a project that is ready to move forward.
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The first step is to clarify the concept.
Many international entrepreneurs begin with a general idea: developing a hotel, installing an industrial unit, creating a technology operation, producing renewable energy or entering the Portuguese market through a new company.
However, for the project to be financed and implemented, that idea must be transformed into a concrete and differentiated concept aligned with a real market opportunity.
At this stage, it is important to answer questions such as:
A clear concept makes it possible to assess feasibility, identify risks and communicate the opportunity professionally to banks, investors, municipalities, public entities and strategic partners.
Without this initial clarity, the project may move forward based on weak assumptions and generate unnecessary costs at a later stage.
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Portugal may be attractive for several reasons: access to the European market, stability, quality of life, talent, competitive costs, tourism potential, infrastructure, European funds and geographic positioning.
However, not every project benefits from Portugal in the same way.
A tourism project may depend on demand, location, licensing and municipal strategy. An industrial project may depend on land, energy, labour, logistics, suppliers and alignment with incentive systems. A technology or healthcare project may require partnerships with universities, research centres, hospitals, incubators or specialised investors.
The strategic analysis should consider market size, demand, access to clients and partners, talent, operating costs, infrastructure, legal and regulatory requirements, export potential, alignment with national or regional priorities, and access to financing and incentives.
The question should not only be: “Is Portugal a good country to invest in?”
The more relevant question is: “Is Portugal the right platform for this specific project?”
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Location is a decisive factor in an investment project.
In Portugal, location influences not only commercial attractiveness, but also licensing, operating costs, labour availability, infrastructure and potential eligibility for public incentives.
In some programmes, certain locations may benefit from more favourable conditions or additional support rates, depending on the applicable call and regional framework.
Location analysis should consider market dynamics, urban planning framework, availability of land or property, municipal restrictions, access to infrastructure, proximity to suppliers or clients, labour availability, installation costs, environmental requirements and compatibility with the territory’s strategy.
In tourism projects, for example, location may determine whether new accommodation units are allowed, whether municipal limitations exist or whether the project is aligned with regional priorities.
In industrial projects, location may influence access to industrial zones, energy costs, logistics and incentives for productive investment.
A good location is not merely an attractive location. It is a location where the project can be approved, financed, implemented and scaled.
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One of the most common mistakes in investment projects is leaving licensing analysis too late.
In Portugal, legal and administrative requirements vary depending on the sector, location, municipality and operating model.
Real estate, tourism, industrial, energy, food, technology, healthcare and regulated-sector projects may require different types of authorisations, opinions or licences.
At this stage, it is essential to understand:
This analysis helps avoid wrong decisions, such as acquiring a property that does not allow the intended activity or preparing a financial plan without considering realistic licensing timelines.
For international investors, licensing should not be seen as a mere administrative formality. It is a central component of investment risk management.
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The corporate structure is an essential component of an investment project in Portugal, especially when international investors, local partners, bank financing or public incentives are involved.
At this stage, it is important to assess:
The choice of corporate structure and economic activity codes should not be treated as an administrative formality. It may influence the tax framework, access to incentives, promoter eligibility and execution capacity.
This analysis should be carried out early, as later changes may create delays, additional costs or difficulties in preparing applications, financing or contracts with partners.
The business plan is the strategic foundation of the project.
It should not be merely a descriptive document. It must demonstrate economic logic, market demand, differentiation, execution capacity and return potential.
A solid business plan should include project description, market analysis, target audience, competitive positioning, business model, commercial strategy, operational plan, team and partners, required investment, cost structure, financial projections, risks, mitigation measures and implementation plan.
The plan should be adapted to the sector.
In a hotel project, for example, it will be necessary to analyse occupancy rate, average daily rate, RevPAR, seasonality, operating costs, sales channels and positioning. In an industrial project, it will be essential to analyse production capacity, equipment, suppliers, production costs, certifications, margins and export potential.
A good business plan does not only present the project. It tests whether the project makes sense.
When the objective includes access to public incentives, the business plan must also be aligned with the criteria of the applicable call and with the relevant national or regional strategy. Otherwise, the application may lose competitiveness or fail to meet the required criteria.
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The financial model translates the project into numbers.
This is where the investor assesses whether the investment is financially sustainable, how much capital is required, when the project reaches break-even and what return it may generate.
A financial model should include initial investment, CAPEX, operating costs, expected revenues, working capital requirements, financing structure, forecast income statement, cash flow, forecast balance sheet, break-even analysis, profitability indicators and sensitivity scenarios.
More than creating optimistic forecasts, the objective is to understand the financial logic of the project.
The investor should be able to answer questions such as:
A well-built financial model increases credibility and supports decisions based on data, rather than intuition or preliminary estimates.
Portugal has several instruments to support investment, including programmes financed by European funds, regional programmes, sector-specific instruments and potentially advantageous credit lines for certain areas of activity.
Portugal 2030 is one of the main European funding frameworks in Portugal, organised through thematic and regional programmes. However, support always depends on open calls, location, company size, sector, nature of the investment and the criteria defined in each call.
Public incentives should therefore not be treated as guaranteed financing. They are demanding and competitive processes subject to specific technical criteria.
The analysis should consider whether the promoter is eligible, whether the sector is supported, whether the location is favourable, whether the planned investments are eligible, whether the project contributes to innovation, sustainability or digitalisation, whether it creates qualified employment, and whether the project calendar is compatible with available calls.
In many cases, the project may benefit from adjustments to improve eligibility and competitiveness. This may involve location, degree of innovation, type of investment, technological component, sustainability or creation of qualified employment.
The question should not only be: “What support is available?”
The more important question is: “How can the project be structured to become innovative, credible and financeable?”
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After estimating the required investment and analysing possible incentives, the financing structure must be defined.
A project can be financed through several sources: equity, private investors, bank financing, public incentives, investment funds, hybrid instruments, strategic partners, asset sale or leasing.
The ideal structure depends on the capital required, sector of activity, risk profile, expected return, promoter’s financial capacity, credibility of the team and project maturity.
In many cases, the most realistic solution involves a combination of equity, bank debt and public incentives.
Each financing source follows a different logic.
Banks look for repayment capacity, guarantees and cash-flow stability. Investors look for return, value creation and exit potential. Public entities look for economic impact in Portugal, eligibility, job creation, strategic coherence and compliance with the objectives presented in the project.
A well-structured project must be able to respond to the expectations of all these stakeholders.
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Once the concept, location, business plan, financial model and financing structure have been defined, the project must be prepared for presentation.
This may include a pitch deck, business plan, financial model, legal documentation, relevant contracts or agreements, licences, implementation roadmap, feasibility study or documentation for public incentive applications.
The presentation format should be adapted to the recipient. A bank does not analyse the project in the same way as a private investor. A public entity does not assess the same criteria as a strategic partner. A municipality may be more focused on local impact, while an investor may be more interested in return and risk mitigation.
For this reason, the documentation must be clear, consistent and professional.
A good project can lose credibility if it is poorly presented.
Project structuring does not end with the business plan.
Execution must also be prepared.
The implementation plan should identify main project phases, entities involved, responsibilities, deadlines, dependencies, critical decisions, risks of delay, licensing milestones, supplier contracting and operational milestones.
This plan is essential to ensure that the project moves forward in a coordinated manner.
In Portugal, many projects require coordination between investors, municipalities, architects, engineers, banks, consultants, licensing authorities, public agencies and local partners.
Poorly coordinated implementation can lead to delays, additional costs and loss of confidence from financiers or investors.
For this reason, an investment project should be structured not only to be approved or financed, but to be effectively implemented.
For international entrepreneurs and investors, working with a local partner can significantly reduce market-entry risk.
A local partner can support areas such as interpretation of the Portuguese context, identification of opportunities, location analysis, coordination with public entities and municipalities, identification of potential project partners, contacts with banks, investors or strategic partners, and implementation support.
This support is particularly relevant when the international entrepreneur is not yet familiar with the Portuguese market, administrative processes, financing criteria or local business practices.
At Lisboa Investments, we support national and international investors in structuring investment projects in Portugal, with a focus on higher value-added projects, particularly in tourism, real estate, industry, renewable energy, technology, healthcare and the entry of international companies into the Portuguese market.
Our role is to help investors transform an opportunity into a clear, financeable and executable investment structure.
Structuring an investment project in Portugal is not merely about preparing documentation.
It is a strategic process that makes it possible to assess feasibility, reduce risks, improve access to financing and increase the probability of successful implementation.
The strongest projects are not only good ideas. They are well-defined, financially sustainable, legally viable, properly located, aligned with financing instruments and prepared for execution.
For international entrepreneurs and investors, this preparation is even more important.
Before investing capital, acquiring assets, incorporating companies or submitting applications, it is essential to structure the project correctly.
Portugal offers relevant opportunities, but those opportunities must be approached with strategy, local knowledge and a clear execution vision.
An investment project in Portugal is a business initiative involving the deployment of capital to create, acquire, expand or develop an economic activity in the country. It may be related to tourism, real estate, industry, energy, technology, healthcare or other sectors.
Because structuring makes it possible to assess whether the project is viable, how much investment will be required, which licences are needed, what risks exist, what financing can be mobilised and whether the project may access public incentives. In some cases, it also allows the project to be adapted to the criteria required for licensing, financing or application purposes.
Yes, a foreign investor can access incentives in Portugal, provided that the project meets the criteria of the applicable programme. Eligibility depends on the sector, location, type of investment, nature of expenditure, timing and rules of the call.
A business plan should include the project concept, market analysis, business model, commercial strategy, operational plan, required investment, financial projections, risks and implementation plan.
A financial model is a tool that projects revenues, costs, investment, financing, cash flow and project profitability. It allows the investor to assess financial sustainability and test different scenarios.
The analysis of incentives should be carried out at an early stage. The way the project is structured may influence its eligibility and competitiveness in an application.
Yes. Location may influence eligibility for incentives, potential additional support rates, operating costs, licensing, access to labour and the overall feasibility of the project. In certain calls, low-density territories or specific regions may benefit from more favourable conditions, while other areas may have lower support rates.
Lisboa Investments supports investors and entrepreneurs in project structuring, preparation of business plans, financial models, incentive analysis, regulatory framework assessment, financing strategy and preparation for implementation in Portugal.
An investment project in Portugal should be structured through several stages: clear definition of the concept, strategic analysis of the Portuguese market, location selection, licensing assessment, definition of the corporate structure and Portuguese economic activity codes, preparation of the business plan, development of the financial model, analysis of public incentives, definition of the financing structure and creation of an implementation plan.
For international investors, support from a local partner can help reduce regulatory, financial and operational risks.
Lisboa Investments supports international investors and companies in structuring, financing and developing investment projects in Portugal — from initial concept to financing strategy and implementation.
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