News and data on Americans abroad, in your inbox weekly. Subscribe.

News and data on Americans abroad, in your inbox weekly. Subscribe.

Americans in Canada Number 256,000 or 373,000 Depending on the Count

News and data on Americans abroad, delivered to your inbox weekly. Subscribe.

Rua Augusta Arch at Praca do Comercio in Lisbon, where Americans face Portugal residence permit delays at AIMA

Portugal Residence Permit Delays Grow as American Applicants Queue at AIMA

Thousands of court cases are backing up Portugal’s immigration authority AIMA, and the resulting Portugal residence permit delays are landing on Americans mid-application. The agency was still working through thousands of outstanding court decisions in May 2026, slowing permit issuance for new residents. The squeeze comes at an awkward moment. Portugal’s American population has never been larger. The Agency for Integration, Migration and Asylum (AIMA) counted 19,258 US citizens legally resident in Portugal in 2024, up 36.3% from 14,129 a year earlier, the agency’s annual migration report shows. That cohort sits inside a permit system that has spent two years in triage. The court docket driving the slowdown AIMA inherited roughly 400,000 pending files when it replaced the dissolved border agency SEF in October 2023. Applicants tired of waiting found a workaround: sue. Portuguese law lets courts order AIMA to issue a decision within a set deadline, and lawsuits naming

Read More »

Americans Moving to Spain Target Madrid, Barcelona and Valencia

Why American Families Are Relocating To Russia Amid U.S Conservative Challenges

A Surge in Americans Applying for Residency in the Netherlands Amid New U.S Presidential Reforms Threatening Liberal Values

What to Know As U.S Citizens Planning to Relocate to Sweden After Elections

Stay Informed with AER

Join our mailing list to receive the latest insights on migration research, policy updates, and global mobility trends—directly to your inbox.

No spam, just sharp, timely content from the world of emigration studies.

By subscribing, you consent to receive emails from the American Emigration Review (AER), including news updates, research highlights, and curated content related to global migration. We are committed to protecting your personal information—your email will never be shared, sold, or used for purposes beyond communication from AER. You can unsubscribe at any time using the link provided in every email.