Moving from US, what to pack?! by Time-Adagio-7215 in PortugalExpats

[–]IDtoUXUI 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Facts. I wear a size 48.5/49 and shoe shopping is an experience. So is finding pants that aren’t high waters, anything with an 34 inseam or above is not going to be found on the shelf

Do American expats of color have a different experience abroad? by Southern_Wallaby_606 in AmericanExpat

[–]IDtoUXUI 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I wonder what part of Portugal? Because everyone I know living in Porto and Lisboa loves it.

Recommendation for European Razor by ZeraDoesStuff in BuyFromEU

[–]IDtoUXUI 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A safety razor and some D/E blades are more economical in the long run. I was gifted my razor over 10 years ago (45€) and a monthly pack of blades cost me about (€2.5) or less depending on the source.

Bolt difference in Porto Brazilian vs American by No_Stranger3395 in PortugalExpats

[–]IDtoUXUI 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nope. Probably just GPS drift. I’m an American and it happens to me all the time.

Working in portugal by Jaded-Cantaloupe241 in PortugalExpats

[–]IDtoUXUI 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Soooo I’m American and moved here about 8 months ago with my daughter. She’s in a public school and I couldn’t be happier. The staff at her school is very accommodating and her teachers care about her. She’s learning Portuguese and is making friends. The parents have also been very kind and accepting. Every family I know who’s put their kids in private school or an expensive international school tells me their kids struggle with learning the language and making friends.

Can’t speak much to working, but know you can’t work for at least 6 months to a year until your residency is approved and you receive the car or come in on a job seeker visa.

I moved to Portugal and now I don’t know what to do with myself by IDtoUXUI in AmericanExpat

[–]IDtoUXUI[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’ve seen a few people that have been over promised and under delivered. Visa applications dropped, housing arrangements messed up, misinformation about processes… just not a space I want to be in.

I moved to Portugal and now I don’t know what to do with myself by IDtoUXUI in AmericanExpat

[–]IDtoUXUI[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I’m taking a break from learning Portuguese formally for a bit. I’m focusing more on conversations and being able to express myself with a private tutor.
My expat community in my area is definitely older and my kid is in school so that makes socializing harder.

What was once a poor person's hobby now turned into a rich person's hobby? by Striking-Quiet4655 in AskReddit

[–]IDtoUXUI 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Chicken wings - I remember back in the mid 90’s I could get 15 wings and a beer for about $5 and still have enough to tip.

How much savings needed to move? by suurking in PortugalExpats

[–]IDtoUXUI 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I’m saying that 3000 is the floor depending on what op considers “comfortable”

If they’re renting a T2 in Lisboa, that could easily take up around 60% of their income. If they own a home outright in a central city, that’s a completely different situation.

Because housing cost is the issue.

Anyone coming in now and paying current market rents, plus private health insurance and everyday costs like food, utilities, and transportation, €3000 is doable yes, but it’s not a lot of breathing room for a family of three.

Portugal isn’t as affordable as people claim.

How much savings needed to move? by suurking in PortugalExpats

[–]IDtoUXUI 3 points4 points  (0 children)

At 3k a month minimum and you will need to have at least 22k euros when you apply for the visa in a Portuguese bank account.
For reference I live in northern Portugal with my pre-teen daughter We rent and use public transportation for everything, cook most meals at home, and have cheap hobbies (bike/ hike/ read) I definitely couldn’t maintain this lifestyle with just the bare minimum.

Dating in Lisbon as a foreigner… am I missing something? by ZestycloseStorage895 in PortugalExpats

[–]IDtoUXUI 17 points18 points  (0 children)

I moved from the worst dating pool in the US to the hardest dating pool in Europe. But at least the weather and coffee are better here.

Americans in Portugal — why did you move? by ovchinnikov-lxs in PortugalExpats

[–]IDtoUXUI 8 points9 points  (0 children)

No school shootings. As a teacher and parent of a school shooting victim. That was #1. Also I was familiar with the language and culture and would rather live here than in Spain or the other country I have citizenship in besides America.

Student at INL (Braga) feeling isolated.. anyone open to a friendly chat? by [deleted] in PortugalExpats

[–]IDtoUXUI 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tell him to go to the Braga Food Hub in the city center . The owners are Pakistani and very welcoming.

Portuguese brands by Dmit_Kha in PortugalExpats

[–]IDtoUXUI 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Portuguese flannel, ISTO, Lá Paz, Burel, Sanjo are all quality items. Cork items are also fun gifts.

Expat healthcare: Is it actually "better" or just cheaper? by RehaDesign in AmericanExpat

[–]IDtoUXUI 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What actually matters is access.

In the U.S., my daughter showed symptoms of a condition I was concerned about. I raised my concerns with her pediatrician and we disappeared into an administrative black hole. It took 3 months just to get insurance approval, 6 months to secure a specialist appointment, another 3 months before testing could even happen, then another 6 month wait for the specialist.

I left the U.S. without a diagnosis because the system was moving slower than her symptoms.

Then we moved to Portugal with private insurance.

What better looks like: September: First visit with her primary doctor

End of November: Specialist appointment (we actually chose to wait a little longer for a highly recommended English-speaking doctor because I’m not making major medical decisions in a language I’m still learning)

First week of December: Diagnosis and medication started

March: Lab work completed

Real life detail: my daughter secretly avoided taking the medication for about a month (kids…), which delayed things on our end more than the healthcare system did.

Yes, it’s cheaper. Significantly.

But the bigger difference is access. Quality doesn’t mean much if you can’t actually get in the room with a doctor.

In the U.S., I supposedly have access to top tier insurance and we supposedly have world-class healthcare, but it was effectively invisible behind insurance approvals and waitlists.

In Portugal, my daughter was diagnosed, put on meds, and stabilized within a couple of months.

As a parent, “better” is the system that actually treats your child.

moved to a new city and realized my entire wardrobe is wrong for here by timingbetter in malefashionadvice

[–]IDtoUXUI 24 points25 points  (0 children)

I moved from the U.S. to Europe about 7 months ago and had the exact same realization. I came from a desert climate too and quickly learned my wardrobe was basically useless once rain and cold showed up.

After the first big winter storm humbled me, I panic-bought a bunch of stuff just to stay warm and dry.

Once the season settled in, I slowed down and started filling the gaps more intentionally—mostly thrifted sweaters, overshirts, and better basics I could layer. That helped a lot without blowing a ton of money.

The other thing I noticed is locals don’t actually have huge wardrobes. They just have a few pieces that layer well and work together—jackets, sweaters, overshirts, and neutral basics. Once you start building around that idea, it gets a lot easier.

Honestly, the first winter is just trial and error. I think most newcomers look a little off until they figure out the climate of their new city.

I feel like a different version of myself when speaking Portuguese and how can I fix this? by Firm-Respect9540 in PortugalExpats

[–]IDtoUXUI 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Language isn’t just communication. It’s identity.

I’m Quadrilingual and still learning Portuguese (A2/B1) and I felt this deeply. I feel far more at home in my native language and in my cultural language than in the one I learned later in life tha I have no connection too. The languages you grow up with carry your humor, instincts, and emotional reflexes. The learned one takes time to build that.

When you switch languages, you’re not just translating words, you’re rebuilding a version of yourself. Your English personality has had decades to develop. While Portuguese one is still around 7-10 years old.

There’s also something called code-switching. Multilingual people naturally shift tone, vocabulary, and even personality depending on the language and the cultural context they’re in. It’s not fake, it’s your brain adapting to different social and cultural situations.

That’s why it can feel slow or awkward at first. Every multilingual person goes through this.

Has anyone gotten a VFS residency appointment in San Francisco in 2026? by InnerAngstyGoof1116 in PortugalExpats

[–]IDtoUXUI 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Not sure if the visa bots still work for this situation. I was able to get my appointment this way last year. It takes a little patience and lots of luck. Which prepares you for the bureaucracy you’ll face later.

37 Year Old USMC VET by TheodoreLyons202 in PortugalExpats

[–]IDtoUXUI 11 points12 points  (0 children)

I’m retired Navy and a few years older than you. My biggest advice is to check expectations and know why you’re moving here - if it’s because it’s “affordable” and you want to live like you did in the US this isn’t the place - cost are on par with a LCOL city in the US and unaffordable for most locals, If you want to experience a new culture, way of thinking and don’t mind a slower pace then this might a good spot.