New York-based pre-seed crypto venture firm manager Catrina Wang missed her flight home from a conference in Portugal back in 2022 — and ended up loving the country so much she has since moved there permanently.Forced to find a hotel at the last minute, her stay in the beautiful forested area of Sintra made the Canadian-born Wang rethink living in the United States.
“I was like ‘Wow, I’m coming back’ and I bought a place at the end of 2023,” she says. Wang now lives in beachfront Cascais on the outskirts of Lisbon.
A general partner at
Portal Ventures which manages $120 million in assets across two crypto funds, Wang says there’s a growing expat community of crypto founders and VCs, many of whom shoot the breeze in a group chat she curates.
“There’s been almost a mini exodus of crypto people. A lot of fund managers and successful founders [went] from New York to Lisbon, that’s been a consistent trend, especially this year.”
Apart from world-beating crypto taxation — capital gains tax is zero percent after 12 months, and coin-to-coin trades don’t need to be recorded — it’s almost as quick to fly to Lisbon from New York as it is to go to LA.
Portugal is attracting crypto people from all over the world, thanks to digital nomad-friendly laws, a special tax rate for highly skilled immigrants, and of course, great weather, beaches and food.
“I just really think it’s the best of multiple worlds when it comes to tax, lifestyle, value, and then it’s just a bit of balance to your crypto life. From a psychological standpoint, I moved there because it’s just the vibe. It is so laid back and chill.”
How did Portugal become a crypto hub?According to Hugo Volz Oliveira, the co-founder and secretary of Portugal-based crypto think tank
New Economy, crypto folk have been attracted to the country for years due to its lifestyle and crypto-friendly taxation.
But he says the floodgates opened during the pandemic with big inflows of crypto folk “around 2020 to 2022.”
Bernado Saraiva, co-founder of global talent mobility platform World Talents, says the company conducted research into crypto workers moving to Portugal.
“Especially after the start of the Ukraine-Russia conflict, most of the people coming from crypto to Portugal were from Ukraine and Russia, but we also see [people] from Germany, Spain and the UK — quite a lot of crypto founders relocating to Portugal.”
In fact, surveys suggest that about 20% of the crypto community in Portugal are founders, twice the number that are devs.
Two of the most high-profile residents are
Ethena founder Guy Young and Immunefi founder Mitchell Amador. Key members of Near, Bankless Ventures, Gnosis, Peak Ventures, Z-Prime and other crypto projects also live in the southern European nation. Crypto VC Lightshift Capital is based in Lisbon.
Crypto projects have collectively raised $1.75 billion to scale their operations in Portugal. World Talents research shows the top sectors are infrastructure (30.5%), VC (22%), DeFi (16%) and gaming and NFTs (10.2%)
All told, Oliveira estimates there are between 10,000 to 100,000 people working in crypto in Portugal, although he adds that getting more precise data is a high priority.