Werkcultuur en weekritme in Portugal
Portugal operates a forty-hour standard workweek under the Labour Code (Código do Trabalho), with most office workers running a nine-to-six day with a one-hour lunch break, although the traditional split day with a longer midday break still exists in smaller cities and traditional sectors. The five-day Monday-to-Friday rhythm is universal in office work.
Statutory paid leave is twenty-two working days per year for full-time employees, and many collective agreements add seniority or performance days bringing total leave to twenty-five or more. The pattern of summer leave concentration in August is similar to neighbouring Spain, with offices operating at substantially reduced capacity for two to three weeks in early-to-mid August.
Portuguese workplace culture is generally warm and relationship-oriented. Decisions often involve more conversation and less paperwork than in Northern European peers, and trust is built through regular informal contact as much as through formal communication channels. The Lisbon and Porto technology sectors have moved closer to international startup norms over the past decade, but traditional Portuguese business culture remains influential in established sectors.