How to Verify in 5 Steps (~2 minutes)
- Open the OA Portal — Go to portal.oa.pt/advogados/pesquisa-de-advogados
- Search by Name or Cédula — Enter the lawyer's full name or license number (e.g., 67185P)
- Confirm Status is "Inscrito" — Active lawyers show "Inscrito" or "Activo" status
- Cross-Check Details — Verify name, cédula number, and regional council match what the lawyer provided
- Save Proof — Screenshot or save the results page as PDF for your records
Portuguese Labels You'll See
- Pesquisa de Advogados — Lawyer Search
- Nome — Name
- Cédula — License number
- Conselho Regional — Regional Council
- Activo / Inscrito — Active / Registered
- Suspenso — Suspended
- Cancelado — Cancelled
- Pesquisar — Search (button)
Why Verification Matters
Before hiring any immigration lawyer in Portugal, verify their credentials with the Portuguese Bar Association. This single step protects you from unlicensed practitioners, suspended lawyers, and outright fraud — all of which are more common in the immigration space than most people realize.
Portugal's Golden Visa and residency programs involve significant money — €500,000 minimum for the Golden Visa alone. This attracts legitimate professionals, but also opportunists who call themselves "consultants," "advisors," or "immigration specialists" without holding a valid law license.
The Difference Between Licensed and Unlicensed
| Term | Meaning | Can Represent You Legally? |
|---|---|---|
| Advogado | Licensed lawyer registered with Ordem dos Advogados | Yes |
| Solicitador | Licensed legal practitioner (limited scope) | Partial |
| Legal Consultant | No specific regulation | No |
| Immigration Advisor | No specific regulation | No |
| Relocation Specialist | No specific regulation | No |
Only a registered advogado can provide legal advice, draft legal documents, and represent you before Portuguese authorities in legal matters. Anyone else using terms like "legal consultant" or "immigration advisor" is not bound by the same professional standards, insurance requirements, or disciplinary oversight.
How to Verify Using Ordem dos Advogados
The Ordem dos Advogados (OA) is Portugal's official bar association. Every licensed Portuguese lawyer must be registered and in good standing to practice law. Their public search tool lets you verify any lawyer in seconds.

Step 1: Go to the Lawyer Search Portal
Visit the official verification page: portal.oa.pt/advogados/pesquisa-de-advogados
Step 2: Enter Search Criteria
You can search by:
- Name (Nome) — Enter first and/or last name
- Cédula number (Cédula Profissional) — The lawyer's license number (e.g., 67185P)
- Location (Conselho) — Filter by region if needed
Step 3: Review the Results
A legitimate, practicing lawyer will show:
- Full name
- Cédula (license) number
- Registration status: "Inscrito" (Registered/Active)
- Regional council affiliation
Step 4: Confirm Active Status
Critical: The status must show "Inscrito" or "Activo". Any other status — suspended, cancelled, or no record found — means you should not proceed.
If the lawyer claims to be licensed but doesn't appear in the search, ask them to clarify. There is no legitimate reason for a practicing Portuguese lawyer to be absent from this database.
If You Can't Find Them, Don't Proceed
If a lawyer claims to be licensed but doesn't appear in the Ordem dos Advogados search — or shows any status other than "Activo" or "Inscrito" — do not engage them. There is no legitimate reason for a practicing Portuguese lawyer to be absent from this database. Ask for clarification, but be prepared to walk away.
What to Look For in Verification Results
| Good Signs | Red Flags |
|---|---|
| Status shows "Inscrito" (Active) | No record found |
| Cédula number matches what lawyer provided | Status shows "Suspenso" (Suspended) |
| Name matches exactly | Status shows "Cancelado" (Cancelled) |
| Current registration with regional council | Lawyer refuses to provide cédula number |
Understanding the Cédula Number
The cédula profissional is the lawyer's unique license number assigned by Ordem dos Advogados. It typically ends with a letter indicating the regional council (e.g., "P" for Porto, "L" for Lisboa).
Example: 67185P = License number 67185, registered with the Porto regional council.
Any lawyer should provide this number without hesitation. Reluctance to share it is a significant warning sign.
Questions to Ask Before Hiring
Before engaging any Portuguese immigration lawyer, ask these questions directly:
Verification Questions
- "What is your cédula profissional number?"
- "Which regional council of Ordem dos Advogados are you registered with?"
- "Can you provide me a direct link to verify your registration?"
Experience Questions
- "How many Golden Visa / D7 / immigration cases have you handled?"
- "What is your approval rate?"
- "Will you personally handle my case, or will it be assigned to someone else?"
Process Questions
- "Who will file documents with AIMA on my behalf?"
- "What is included in your fee, and what costs extra?"
- "How will you communicate updates throughout the process?"
A legitimate immigration lawyer will answer all of these questions clearly and provide verification without hesitation.
MovingTo's Licensed Immigration Lawyers
At MovingTo, we believe transparency builds trust. While many firms hide their legal team behind generic descriptions, we publish our lawyers' credentials and verification links before you sign anything.
Our commitment: Every lawyer working on your case is a licensed advogado registered with the Portuguese Bar Association. You can verify their credentials yourself using the links below.
David Simões Fitas
Senior Immigration Lawyer · View Full Profile →
| Bar Registration | Cédula Profissional #67185P |
| Verify Credentials | → Check on Ordem dos Advogados |
| Qualifications | Master's in Labour Law, Universidade Católica Portuguesa; Law degree, Universidade de Coimbra |
| Experience | 7+ years immigration law |
| Track Record | 400+ immigration cases with 100% approval rate |
| Specialization | Golden Visa, Portuguese citizenship, family reunification |
| Last Verified | February 2026 |
Verify this lawyer: Open
OA search
→ Enter name "David Simões Fitas" → Confirm status shows "Activo"
David is an independent immigration lawyer with deep expertise in Portuguese residency-by-investment programs. He has been quoted in PÚBLICO (Portugal's leading newspaper) on immigration matters and handles complex cases involving multiple jurisdictions.
Inês Cabral Almeida
Immigration Lawyer · View Full Profile →
| Bar Registration | Cédula Profissional #61676P |
| Verify Credentials | → Check on Ordem dos Advogados |
| Specialization | Golden Visa applications, residency permits, legal document review |
| Last Verified | February 2026 |
Verify this lawyer: Open
OA search
→ Enter cédula "61676P" → Confirm status shows "Activo"
Inês specializes in Golden Visa and residency applications, with particular expertise in document preparation and AIMA procedures. She reviews all legal content on MovingTo's website for accuracy.
Paulo Moura
Immigration Lawyer · View Full Profile →
| Bar Registration | Cédula Profissional #71517P |
| Verify Credentials | → Check on Ordem dos Advogados |
| Qualifications | Master's in Forensic Legal Sciences, University of Coimbra |
| Languages | Portuguese, English, Spanish |
| Specialization | D7 Passive Income Visa, D8 Digital Nomad Visa, Portuguese residency |
| Last Verified | February 2026 |
Verify this lawyer: Open
OA search
→ Enter cédula "71517P" → Confirm status shows "Activo"
Paulo focuses on income-based residency routes, helping remote workers, retirees, and passive income earners navigate Portugal's D7 and D8 visa programs.
Related Resources
Learn more about working with MovingTo and our approach to immigration services:
- Our Legal Team— Meet the licensed lawyers who handle your case
- How MovingTo Works— Our coordination model explained
- Legal Review Policy— How we verify content accuracy
- Portugal Golden Visa Guide— Complete 2026 requirements
- Portugal D7 Visa Guide— Passive income visa requirements
- Portugal D8 Digital Nomad Visa— Remote worker visa guide
Trust & Accountability at MovingTo
Beyond verifying credentials, here's how we protect your interests:
Professional Indemnity Insurance
All lawyers working with MovingTo carry professional indemnity insurance as required by Portuguese law. This protects you if a lawyer's negligence causes financial loss. The Ordem dos Advogados verifies insurance status as part of every lawyer's annual registration — it's mandatory, not optional.
How Engagement Works
When you work with MovingTo, you'll have two separate contracts:
- Contract with MovingTo: Covers coordination services — project management, document organization, communication, Moving Hub platform access, and service provider introductions (banks, NIF, etc.). MovingTo invoices for these services.
- Contract with your assigned lawyer(s): Covers all legal services — advice, document drafting, representation before AIMA and authorities. The lawyer invoices separately for legal work.
This separation ensures clear accountability: MovingTo is responsible for coordination quality, and your licensed lawyer is responsible for legal outcomes (with Bar oversight and professional insurance backing that responsibility).
Complaints & Escalation
If something goes wrong, you have clear options:
- Service issues: Raise with your case manager first, then escalate to complaints@movingto.com
- Legal issues: Raise with your lawyer directly, or escalate to the Ordem dos Advogados (the Bar has disciplinary authority over all registered lawyers)
Read our full Complaints Policy →
Red Flags — When to Walk Away
Do not proceed if you encounter any of these warning signs:
Identity Red Flags
- Lawyer cannot provide a cédula number
- Name doesn't appear in Ordem dos Advogados search
- Claims to be "registered in another EU country" but practices Portuguese immigration law
- Uses titles like "legal consultant" or "immigration advisor" instead of "advogado"
Process Red Flags
- Guarantees visa approval (no one can guarantee government decisions)
- Asks for full payment upfront before providing credentials
- Cannot clearly explain who will file documents with AIMA
- Refuses to put fee structure in writing
- Pressures you to sign quickly without time to verify
Communication Red Flags
- Reluctant to answer direct questions about qualifications
- Vague about their track record or experience level
- Cannot provide references or case examples
- Only communicates through intermediaries, never directly
If any of these apply, stop and find another lawyer. The immigration space has enough qualified professionals that you never need to take risks with unverified practitioners.
Tools: Email Template & Call Checklist
Use these scripts when vetting any immigration lawyer — not just ours.
Email Template: Request Credentials
Copy and send this to any lawyer before signing:
Subject: Credential verification before engagement Dear [Lawyer Name], Before proceeding, I would appreciate confirmation of the following: 1. Your cédula profissional (Portuguese Bar registration number) 2. A direct link to verify your registration on Ordem dos Advogados 3. Confirmation of who will personally file documents with AIMA 4. Whether you carry professional indemnity insurance I understand this is standard due diligence and look forward to your response. Best regards, [Your Name]
10-Question Call Checklist
Print or screenshot this list before any consultation call:
Tip: A legitimate lawyer will answer all 10 questions without hesitation. Evasiveness on any point is a red flag.
