How to read these numbers
The yields shown below are gross yield benchmarks — annual rent divided by purchase price — for T1 and T2 apartments in good-to-average condition. They represent achievable ranges observed across recent transactions and listings in 2026, not theoretical ceilings.
Gross yield does not account for vacancy, IMI (~0.4%/year), condominium fees, maintenance, or IRS on rental income. To get to cap rate (the metric that matters for investment analysis), subtract roughly 2–3 percentage points from gross yield for a well-managed property in average condition. Use the cap rate calculator to run your specific numbers.
High yield zones — above 7% gross
These are Lisbon's emerging or overlooked neighbourhoods, where prices have not yet caught up with rising rents. They typically have higher-than-average renovation needs and are in the process of gentrifying — which means they carry more risk but also more upside.
| Zone | Gross yield range | Character |
|---|---|---|
| Mouraria | 7.5–9% | Historic, multicultural, strong short-term and long-term demand |
| Intendente | 7–9% | Adjacent to Mouraria; faster gentrification pace, mixed stock quality |
| Martim Moniz | 7–8.5% | High footfall, varied stock, some commercial-to-residential conversions |
| Alcântara | 6.5–8% | West Lisbon riverside; mix of old industrial and modern stock |
| Olaias | 7.5–9.5% | Eastern Lisbon; highest yields reflect distance from centre and stock age |
Mid yield zones — 5–7% gross
Lisbon's established residential zones. Properties are typically in better condition, tenant demand is more stable, and price appreciation is more consistent. The trade-off is lower gross yield — but lower risk and lower management burden.
| Zone | Gross yield range | Character |
|---|---|---|
| Areeiro | 6–7% | Central, residential, excellent transport links, steady demand |
| Arroios | 6–7.5% | Diverse, actively gentrifying, good value relative to central Lisbon |
| Alvalade | 5.5–6.5% | Premium residential, high-quality stock, family-oriented, lower vacancy |
| Benfica | 6–7% | Outer residential, good transport, strong local tenant demand |
| Roma / Entrecampos | 5.5–7% | Central, business district adjacent, mix of older and renovated stock |
| Saldanha | 5.5–6.5% | CBD-adjacent, good for professional tenants, consistent demand |
Lower yield zones — below 5% gross
Lisbon's premium neighbourhoods, where price appreciation has outrun rents. Capital values are high and inventory is scarce — which protects against downside but compresses yield. Investors here are typically betting on capital appreciation, not current income.
| Zone | Gross yield range | Character |
|---|---|---|
| Chiado | 3.5–5% | Most prestigious address in Lisbon; very low inventory, very high prices |
| Príncipe Real | 3–4.5% | Boutique luxury; prices above €8,000/m² in many cases |
| Avenida da Liberdade | 3–4% | Trophy location; office and luxury residential mixed; low pure-rental yield |
| Campo de Ourique | 4.5–5.5% | Quiet, family-friendly; lower rental premium vs. its capital value |
| Belém | 4–5.5% | Western Lisbon; tourist-driven in parts; mixed residential and tourism stock |
Why is the yield spread so large?
The gap between 3% in Príncipe Real and 9% in Olaias reflects three structural dynamics:
- Price appreciation has been uneven. Premium central zones have seen enormous capital inflows — from golden visa buyers, diaspora capital, and international wealth — that pushed prices up faster than rents. Emerging zones haven't yet attracted that capital, so prices remain lower relative to rental income.
- Risk premium. Higher yields in places like Mouraria or Intendente reflect higher uncertainty: more renovation risk, less predictable tenant quality, more volatile vacancy rates. That risk premium is real — it's not a free lunch.
- Holding period mismatch. Many buyers in premium zones are not seeking income — they are seeking a Lisbon address, capital preservation, or a future primary residence. This pushes prices above what income-seeking investors would pay, compressing yield.
Beyond Lisbon — Porto, Algarve, and secondary cities
Lisbon gets the most attention, but Portugal's other markets can offer better yield at lower entry prices:
| Market | Gross yield range | Profile |
|---|---|---|
| Porto (Bonfim, Campanhã) | 6–8% | Strong student and young professional demand; lower prices than Lisbon |
| Porto (Foz, Boavista) | 4–5.5% | Premium Porto zones; similar dynamics to Lisbon's premium areas |
| Algarve (Lagos, Tavira) | 5–7% (seasonal) | Tourism-dependent; short-term rental income can be higher but with more management |
| Braga | 6–8% | University city; strong student demand; much lower entry prices |
| Coimbra | 6–8% | Similar to Braga; consistent student rental demand |
| Setúbal / Almada | 5.5–7% | Lisbon commuter belt; lower prices, strong demand from workers priced out of Lisbon |
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