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HomeTopicsDaily Essentials

Lisbon

Daily Essentials

Affordable essentials, grocery options, and setup tips.

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AI summary · assistance only

You'll find that pharmacies in Lisbon are well-stocked and pharmacists are qualified to advise on minor ailments, with many medications available without prescription. For more serious health issues, registering with a local health centre (USF) is a crucial step, which you can do once you have Portuguese residency and a NIF. Most newcomers are surprised to learn that dental care is almost entirely excluded from the public healthcare system (SNS), with private costs ranging from 30-50 for a consultation to 60-100 for a filling. Watch out for the costs of private health insurance, with providers like AdvanceCare and Mdis offering a range of plans. To get started, you can visit a pharmacy like those in Chiado or Benfica to get advice on minor ailments. Today, take a few minutes to research and locate your nearest USF to register for primary care.

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Maternity care in Portugal — SNS and private options

Trust L1Updated Mar 18, 2026

Arroios · Experience date Nov 21, 2025

SNS maternity care is generally good, with public hospitals providing free delivery and postnatal care. For births in Lisbon: Hospital de Santa Maria, Maternidade Dr. Alfredo da Costa (public), and private options at CUF Descobertas and Hospital da Luz. Private birth: €2,000–4,000 with good insurance coverage or €4,000–8,000 out-of-pocket. Most Lisbon private health insurers cover maternity with a waiting period of 10–12 months. English-speaking midwives and obstetricians are available at major private hospitals.

Contributor: Yuki Tanaka

Pharmacies in Lisbon — what you can buy without prescription

Trust L1Updated Feb 24, 2026

Chiado · Experience date Apr 20, 2026

Portuguese pharmacies (farmácias) are well-stocked and pharmacists are qualified to advise on minor ailments. Many medications available over the counter in Portugal that require prescriptions elsewhere: some antibiotics, stronger anti-inflammatories, specific allergy treatments. Parafarmacias (lower-cost alternative): sell cosmetics, vitamins, and OTC medications at 10–20% lower prices than pharmacies. Look for the green cross. 24-hour pharmacies: Farmácia Barros (Rossio), Farmácia Marquês de Pombal. Most pharmacists speak some English in central Lisbon.

Contributor: Lucas Mendes

Pharmacies in Portugal — Farmácias are well-stocked and accessible

Trust L1Updated Mar 15, 2026

Benfica · Experience date Apr 1, 2026

Portuguese pharmacies (Farmácias) are excellent: well-stocked, pharmacists are university-trained and can advise on many conditions without a prescription, and many over-the-counter medications in Portugal require no prescription. Most Lisbon pharmacists speak basic English. 24-hour pharmacies in central Lisbon: Farmácia Barros (Av. da Liberdade) and a rotating on-call system ('Farmácia de Serviço') — look for the green cross with 'serviço' displayed. Prescription medications from other EU countries are usually accepted with the original prescription.

Contributor: Tom Fletcher

Latest from the community

Pingo Doce and Continente for groceries — Mercadona for budget

May 7, 2026

Avenidas Novas · Experience date Jan 5, 2026

Pingo Doce has the best ready meals and is open late. Continente has better selection. Mercadona is cheapest. Avoid tourist-area minimarkets — massively overpriced.

Contributor: pouyakiaei

NHS comparison — what's better and worse than UK's NHS

May 2, 2026

Chiado · Experience date Feb 7, 2026

Compared to the UK NHS: SNS has shorter GP wait times for registered patients (2–4 weeks vs often 3–6 weeks in England), but specialist waiting lists can be comparable. The big difference: Portugal has a thriving private sector at relatively affordable prices, making the SNS + private insurance hybrid much more practical than in the UK. Hospital facilities in private Lisbon hospitals (CUF, Luz) are excellent by EU standards — comparable to the best UK private hospitals at lower prices.

Contributor: Anna Kowalski

Registering with a USF — your first step for primary care

May 1, 2026

Benfica · Experience date Feb 2, 2026

Once you have Portuguese residency and a NIF, register with your local USF (health centre). Find your assigned health centre via the Portal do Utente (utente.min-saude.pt). Bring: NIF, residency permit (or visa), passport, and proof of address. You'll be assigned a family doctor (médico de família). Wait time to get assigned: can be 2–8 weeks in Lisbon due to high demand. While waiting: you can still access SNS urgent care (Urgência) for acute issues.

Contributor: James Wilson

Optician and vision care — not covered by SNS

Apr 17, 2026

Benfica · Experience date Dec 15, 2025

Vision care (eye tests, glasses, contact lenses) is not covered by the SNS. Private eye exam: €30–50. Some private health insurance plans include vision riders. Optical chains in Lisbon: MultiÓpticas and Ótica Universitária are the most widespread. Eye exam plus basic glasses: €80–150. Prescription contact lenses: comparable to UK prices. For contact lens wearers: bring a supply and a copy of your prescription — Portuguese opticians can match the prescription once you're settled.

Contributor: Carlos Rivera

English-speaking doctors in Lisbon — how to find them

Apr 9, 2026

Almada · Experience date Apr 1, 2026

Finding English-speaking doctors: CUF and Luz Saúde hospitals have English-speaking staff across specialties — call their appointment lines and specify 'médico que fale inglês'. The Lisbon Doctors (lisbondoctors.com) maintains a directory of English-speaking private physicians. Expat Facebook groups (Lisbon Expats, Portugal Expats) regularly share doctor recommendations. International-focused GP clinics: International Medical Centre Lisbon (near Av. da Liberdade) caters specifically to expats and international patients.

Contributor: Sophie Martin

SNS — Portugal's national health system, free at point of use

Mar 26, 2026

Parque das Nações · Experience date Nov 26, 2025

The SNS (Serviço Nacional de Saúde) is Portugal's public health system. EU citizens with an EHIC card can access SNS services while visiting. Once registered as a resident, you access SNS by registering at your local USF (Unidade de Saúde Familiar — health centre) with your NIF, proof of address, and residency permit. GP appointments at SNS are free or nominally priced (€5 moderating fee). Wait times for GP can be 2–6 weeks — for urgent care, SNS hospitals and urgent care centres (CMIN) provide same-day access.

Contributor: Anna Kowalski

Travel insurance vs Portuguese health insurance — what you need

Mar 26, 2026

Chiado · Experience date Dec 21, 2025

Short-term visitors (under 90 days): good travel insurance covering medical is sufficient — no need for Portuguese private insurance. Medium-term (90 days to 1 year): get Portuguese private health insurance or a globally-valid expat insurance plan (Cigna Global, Allianz Care). Long-term residents: register with SNS as primary care plus a Portuguese private insurance add-on (AdvanceCare, Médis). Long-term visitors from the EU: EHIC covers SNS care. Never arrive in Portugal for more than a few weeks without medical coverage — SNS emergency fees for non-covered foreigners can be substantial.

Contributor: Raj Patel
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