Pastel de nata
Try one classic bakery and one neighborhood version instead of making the whole day a pastry queue.

A Portugal first-trip checklist for Lisbon hills, Porto weather, classic foods, euros, cards, and low-friction transit.
This page is intentionally static. Use it before booking, then verify current payment acceptance, local transport rules, prices, closures, and entry details near departure.
Portugal is one of the easier first Europe choices, but the basics still matter. The biggest practical issues are hills, footwear, weather layers, and leaving enough time for Lisbon and Porto rather than rushing a wide loop.
The food plan should mix bakeries, seafood, simple sandwiches, and regional dishes. A good Portugal trip does not need every meal reserved.
Reviewed 2026-06-27
Static planning guidance. Verify current payment acceptance, transit card rules, ATM fees, opening hours, local closures, and entry requirements before departure.
Keep the bag focused on the country, season, and route shape instead of rare edge cases.
Treat these as useful route anchors, not a rigid list that makes every meal feel mandatory.
Try one classic bakery and one neighborhood version instead of making the whole day a pastry queue.
Salt cod appears in many styles; use it as a regional meal, not a single dish to check off.
A low-pressure pork sandwich that fits lunch or late arrival days.
Best treated as seasonal rather than assumed available year-round.
A Porto-heavy comfort dish that makes more sense there than as a universal Portugal meal.
Payment acceptance varies by city, merchant, machine, card network, and date. Use this as the backup plan to verify before departure.
Useful for small cafes, markets, tips, and places with low card minimums or terminal issues.
Generally useful in hotels, restaurants, museums, larger stores, and transport booking.
Often convenient in cities, but a physical backup card is still sensible.
Use bank-linked ATMs when possible and check fees before confirming a withdrawal.
Choose euros on terminals when offered a home-currency conversion.
Cards are useful in many city settings, but small cash remains practical for bakeries, markets, local cafes, tips, and backup situations.
Shoes with grip matter most. Lisbon's hills, stairs, and polished sidewalks make footwear more important than most specialty gear.
Only if the trip has enough days and the season supports it. Lisbon and Porto alone can carry a strong first route.
Pair country essentials with checks for hotel location, transfer risk, timed tickets, rail passes, and hidden package costs.