Portugal Sees 283% Surge in Voluntary Migrant Returns as PSP Expands Support Programs

January 29, 2026
Portugal Sees 283% Surge in Voluntary Migrant Returns as PSP Expands Support Programs
  • Portugal’s PSP reports a 2025 surge in voluntary migrant returns, with 758 irregular migrants choosing to return home, marking a 283% jump from 2024’s 198 voluntary returns.

  • The program centers on humane, assisted exits rather than forced removals, and PSP has expanded counseling training and support from Return specialists, including collaboration with Frontex.

  • With intensified counseling and specialist aid, more than 700 people returned home in 2025 under the joint effort of Portuguese authorities and European partners.

  • Data show that Brazilians accounted for more than half of expulsions in 2024 and 2025.

  • In the last quarter of 2025, about 80 readmission cases were processed by European authorities; PSP, aided by AIMA, declined 34% of these readmission requests under bilateral agreements.

  • Since SEF’s dissolution, border duties shifted to PSP, and in August of the prior year UNEF expanded to include withdrawal, readmission, and voluntary return operations for irregular migrants.

  • UNEF now manages border control, airport security, and withdrawal/readmission/return processes, while also running temporary accommodation centers for foreigners in major cities.

  • UNEF’s expanded mandate covers withdrawal, readmission, and voluntary return functions previously handled by AIMA.

  • In 2025 the PSP processed 276 migrant removal cases, up 58% from 2024, including 161 judicial expulsions, 69 coercive removals, 21 border escorts, and 21 inadmissible cases.

  • The 2025 forced removal figures reflect growth across expulsions, coercive removals, border controls, and inadmissible cases, totaling 276 processes.

  • Separately, PSP recorded 276 withdrawal processes in 2025, a substantial increase year over year, spanning expulsions, coercive withdrawals, border procedures, and inadmissible cases.

  • Experts attribute the rise in numbers to enhanced return counseling, expanded specialist support, and active cooperation with Frontex as part of the rollout.

Summary based on 5 sources


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