Social Security
Segurança Social
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Portugal's mandatory social contribution system for solo entrepreneurs. Covers healthcare, sick leave, parental leave, and pensions, funded by a 21.4% contribution on declared income.
If you're working as a solo entrepreneur in Portugal, Social Security (Segurança Social) is the mandatory contribution system that funds your access to healthcare, sick leave, parental leave, and a retirement pension. It's separate from income tax, different institution, different portal, different deadlines.
What you pay
The contribution rate for independent workers is 21.4% of your relevant income. "Relevant income" isn't your full gross, it's calculated from what you declare in your quarterly filing, with coefficients applied depending on your activity type. For most service-based freelancers, the effective base is about 70% of declared income.
Even if you earn nothing in a given quarter, there's a minimum contribution of roughly €20 per month. You can't drop to zero.
The 12-month exemption
First-time solo entrepreneurs get a full year without contributions. This exemption (isenção do primeiro ano) starts from the date of your first income, not from when you opened your activity with the tax authority. It's automatic, but worth confirming on the Segurança Social Direta portal to make sure the system picked up the right start date.
Quarterly declarations drive everything
After the exemption, your contributions are based on a quarterly income declaration (declaração trimestral) that you file on the Segurança Social Direta portal. You report your gross income for the previous three months, and the system recalculates what you owe for the next quarter.
This means your contributions follow your actual income with a slight delay. A good quarter means higher contributions next time. A slow quarter means lower ones. The system is designed to track reality rather than lock you into fixed amounts.
What you get back
The benefits are real, even if they're less generous than what employees receive:
- Healthcare through the SNS (Serviço Nacional de Saúde)
- Sick leave after a waiting period, at a reduced rate
- Parental leave for both parents
- Retirement pension based on your contribution history
Two systems, not one
The most common point of confusion for expats: Social Security and the tax authority (AT) are completely independent. You file taxes on the Portal das Finanças. You file Social Security declarations on Segurança Social Direta. Different credentials, different calendars, different rules. Neither knows what you filed with the other unless they cross-reference, which they sometimes do, but not in real time.
For a complete breakdown with worked examples, the Year 2 contribution jump, quarterly declaration walkthrough, and edge cases like dual employment, see Social Security for Freelancers in Portugal: The Complete Guide.
For the full details in Portuguese context, see the Segurança Social glossary entry.
Frequently asked questions
How much do I pay in Social Security as a freelancer in Portugal?
The contribution rate is 21.4% of your relevant declared income. Contributions are recalculated every quarter based on the income you report in your quarterly declaration (declaração trimestral). There's a minimum of roughly €20/month even if you earn nothing.
Do I get a first-year exemption from Social Security?
Yes. If you're registering as a solo entrepreneur for the first time, you're exempt from Social Security contributions for 12 months. The exemption period starts from your first income declaration, not from when you registered your activity.
What does Social Security actually cover in Portugal?
As a contributing solo entrepreneur, you're covered by public healthcare (SNS), sick leave benefits, parental leave (maternity and paternity), and a retirement pension. The coverage isn't as generous as for employees, but it's real and it matters, especially sick leave and parental leave.
Where do I file my quarterly income declaration?
On Segurança Social Direta, the Social Security online portal at app.seg-social.pt. This is completely separate from the Portal das Finanças where you handle taxes and invoices. You need separate credentials for each.
What happens if I don't pay Social Security contributions?
Unpaid contributions accumulate as debt with interest. Segurança Social can and does pursue collection, including through wage garnishment and asset seizure. Prolonged non-payment can also affect your access to benefits like sick leave and parental leave. Don't ignore it.
Related terms
Portugal's social security system. Solo entrepreneurs contribute 21.4% of declared income to fund healthcare, sick leave, parental leave, and retirement pension.
Trabalhador IndependenteSelf-Employed WorkerThe Portuguese term for an independent worker or sole entrepreneur, the equivalent of a freelancer or sole trader in other countries.
Regime SimplificadoRegime Simplificado de Tributação · Simplified Tax RegimePortugal's simplified tax regime for solo entrepreneurs and small businesses, where taxable income is calculated using fixed coefficients applied to gross revenue.
Recibo VerdeGreen ReceiptA combined invoice-receipt (fatura-recibo) issued by solo entrepreneurs in Portugal through the Portal das Finanças when they receive payment for services.