Lisbon's seven hills run from the pombaline Baixa up through Chiado and Príncipe Real to the belle-époque mansions of Avenida da Liberdade. Fine Luxury Property advises international buyers on apartments, townhouses and restoration-grade palacetes across the capital's prime parishes, from historic cores to new-build riverside developments.
Renovated three-to-four bedroom apartments in Chiado, Príncipe Real and Avenida da Liberdade, typically €1.5-€4 million, many with original stone staircases, azulejo panels and private terraces.
New-build and pombaline-conversion penthouses with Tagus views in Baixa, Cais do Sodré and Santos, combining protected facades with contemporary duplex layouts and private rooftop pools.
Four-to-five storey townhouses and palacetes in Lapa, Estrela and Príncipe Real, from restored 18th-century family homes to embassy-grade buildings with courtyards and staff quarters.
Detached villas in the northern axis of Alvalade, Lumiar and Restelo, typically with gardens of 400-1,200 m², well suited to families relocating with children under the international-school catchments.
Fine Luxury Property operates as a boutique real estate agency dedicated to Lisbon's prime parishes, combining three decades of combined local experience with a multilingual team working fluently in English, Portuguese, French and Spanish, serving the substantial French, Brazilian and British expatriate communities that now shape the city. We handle AMI-regulated brokerage, NIF registration, IMT settlement and coordination with independent Portuguese lawyers end-to-end.
Lisbon's UNESCO-eligible pombaline, gothic and manueline buildings are strictly limited in number and protected by Câmara Municipal heritage rules, creating structural scarcity in the prime parishes of Santa Maria Maior, Misericórdia and Santo António.
Prime Lisbon has appreciated roughly 6-9% annually since 2015, with Chiado and Príncipe Real now trading at €8,000-€13,000 per square metre, still a 30-40% discount to prime Madrid, Paris or Milan despite comparable lifestyle.
Humberto Delgado Airport offers direct flights to 120+ destinations, including a five-hour daily link to the US East Coast, making Lisbon one of the most connected second-home cities in Europe for both Atlantic-facing and intra-EU travel.
Carlucci American International School, St Julian's, Lycée Français Charles Lepierre, Deutsche Schule and three IB-curriculum campuses serve the rapidly expanding expatriate base, a critical driver for family-relocation demand in Alvalade, Restelo and Lumiar.
Lisbon's prime stock ranges from pombaline Baixa to new-build Parque das Nações, each with different heritage rules, IMI bands and rental-licence realities. We start every engagement with a parish-level briefing so the buyer chooses the correct micro-market for their use case.
We organise a Portuguese tax number (NIF), a local bank account and, where the client cannot attend completion in person, a certified power of attorney granted to a Lisbon-based lawyer, typically all inside two weeks.
After offer acceptance, a reservation agreement holds the property while lawyers verify the Caderneta Predial, Certidão Permanente, energy certificate (A to F), condominium minutes and any heritage restrictions applicable in parishes like Misericórdia or Santa Maria Maior.
The promissory contract is signed before a notary or lawyer, with a 10-20% deposit transferred via Portuguese bank. Completion is scheduled 30-90 days later, typically subject to mortgage approval or full clearance of title queries.
On final deed day the notary confirms proof of IMT payment (sliding 0-7.5% on urban properties) and stamp duty (0.8%), the purchase price transfers, and the Registo Predial records ownership the same day. Keys transfer immediately.
Heritage rules and a finite stock of pombaline and 19th-century buildings cap new supply in central parishes. Fewer than 400 transactions a year happen across Chiado, Misericórdia and Santo António combined, keeping liquidity tight and pricing firm.
Beyond second-home buyers, Lisbon is now a primary-residence destination for French, American, British and Brazilian families relocating under D7, D8 or IFICI visas, underwriting long-term demand irrespective of short-let licence volatility.
Existing licensed short-let properties trade at a premium because central Lisbon parishes, including Santa Maria Maior and Misericórdia, have restricted new AL registrations since 2018, making licensed units genuinely scarce.
Parque das Nações, Alvalade and Campo Grande continue to attract corporate HQs, Web Summit infrastructure and university expansion, delivering stable long-let demand at rental yields 100-150 bps above central heritage parishes.
A renovated three-bedroom apartment in Chiado or Príncipe Real typically costs €1.8-€3.5 million, or €8,500-€13,000 per square metre. Avenida da Liberdade penthouses reach €14,500 per square metre. Lapa and Estrela townhouses trade between €6,500 and €10,500 per square metre depending on garden, lift and parking. Parque das Nações new-build apartments are more accessible at €5,500-€8,500 per square metre, while family villas in Restelo, Alvalade and Lumiar run €4,500-€7,000 per square metre.
For heritage and lifestyle, Príncipe Real and Chiado remain the top targets, combining concept stores, galleries and restored 19th-century apartments. Avenida da Liberdade suits buyers wanting embassy-grade apartments on Lisbon's Champs-Élysées. Lapa and Estrela attract families wanting townhouses near Lycée Français. Restelo, Alvalade and Lumiar are northern family districts near international schools. Parque das Nações, Marvila and Alcântara deliver modern riverside apartments at better per-square-metre entry points.
Non-residents face no ownership restrictions. The process needs a Portuguese NIF (tax number), a Portuguese bank account and an independent advogado. After offer acceptance, the buyer signs a reservation agreement, then a promissory contract (CPCV) with a 10-20% deposit, then the final deed (escritura) before a notary 30-90 days later. Our Lisbon team regularly completes transactions for French, British, American, Swiss and Brazilian clients, coordinating with bilingual lawyers and tax advisors throughout.
Total closing costs run about 7-9% of the purchase price. IMT transfer tax is charged on a sliding 0-7.5% scale, with second homes and properties above €1 million incurring higher effective rates. Stamp duty adds 0.8%. Notary and registry fees add roughly 1-2%. Annual municipal IMI in Lisbon is 0.3% of the rateable value. Legal fees typically run 1% plus VAT for full conveyancing by an independent Portuguese advogado.
Possibly, but licensing is now tight. Central parishes, including Santa Maria Maior, Misericórdia and much of Santo António, have been classed as contention zones since 2018, suspending new Alojamento Local registrations. Existing licensed properties can be transferred on sale, which is why licensed AL units trade at a premium. Long-let rentals remain fully allowed across all parishes and typically deliver 3.5-4.5% gross yield on prime apartments. We flag AL licence status on every listing we introduce.
Yes, and your lawyer should be independent of the agent. A licensed Portuguese advogado runs full title and planning due diligence on the Caderneta Predial, Certidão Permanente, condominium minutes, energy certificate and any heritage overlays applicable in parishes like Misericórdia. They also review the promissory and final contracts and liaise with the notary. Legal fees run roughly 1% of purchase price plus 23% VAT. Fine Luxury Property works with English-, French- and Portuguese-speaking law firms across Lisbon.
Long-let prime apartments in Chiado, Príncipe Real and Avenida da Liberdade deliver roughly 3.5-4.5% gross yield. Alojamento Local short-lets in licensed Alfama, Bairro Alto and Baixa buildings can reach 5-7% gross after platform fees, though operating costs are higher. Parque das Nações and Alvalade long-lets run 4-5% given lower per-square-metre entry prices and strong corporate-tenant demand. Net yields sit roughly 80-150 bps below gross once IMI, management and vacancies are modelled.
Humberto Delgado Airport sits inside the city limits, roughly 7 km from Avenida da Liberdade, 9 km from Chiado and 12 km from Belém. Driving time is 15-25 minutes outside peak hours. The red metro line connects the airport directly to Alameda and Oriente stations, and a taxi to most central parishes costs €12-€18. This tight footprint is a major differentiator against Madrid, Barcelona and Paris for second-home buyers making 30-40 trips a year.
Serving international clients in Lisbon. Expertise in historic preservation, new developments, and investment properties across all neighborhoods.