Skip to main content
European Commission logo

Eurydice

EACEA National Policies Platform:Eurydice
Upper secondary and post-secondary non-tertiary Education
Portugal

Portugal

6.Upper secondary and post-secondary non-tertiary Education

Last update: 12 April 2025

Upper secondary education

According to the Education Act, every student who successfully completes basic education has access to upper secondary education.

Upper secondary education comprises three years of schooling (grades 10, 11 and 12 in the case of Science-Humanities courses or 1st, 2nd and 3rd year of training in the case of vocational courses) and is compulsory for all students who are in compulsory education). It corresponds to ISCED level 3 or QNQ/QEQ levels 3 or 4 when this level is completed via a dual certification vocational education course (see Subchapter 6.6. Assessment in Vocational Upper Secondary Education).

Until 2009, upper secondary education was optional. Since then, following Law 85/2009, 27 August, which established compulsory education for children and young people aged between 6 and 18, it has become universal, free, and compulsory.

Objectives and political context

According to the Education Act, general educational aims for upper secondary education are as follows:

  • To develop students’ capacity for reasoning, reflection and scientific curiosity, as well as the expansion of the basic elements of humanities, artistic, scientific and technical culture that constitute an appropriate cognitive and methodological basis for further studies and working life.
  • To provide young people with the essential knowledge to understand aesthetic and cultural expression and allow them to improve their own artistic expression.
  • To foster the acquisition and application of increasingly in-depth knowledge based on study, critical thinking, observation and experimentation.
  • To educate young people interested in solving national problems and making them aware of the problems affecting the international community, on the basis of the regional and national context and respect for the permanent values of society in general, and Portuguese culture in particular.
  • To provide contact with and experience of the world of work, strengthening the ties between school, working life and the community, and by stimulating the innovative and participative role of the school.
  • To foster the vocational guidance and training of young people by means of technical and technological knowledge that will help them find work.
  • To create individual and group working habits and to foster the development of methodical reflection, open-mindedness, awareness and acceptance of others, and the capacity to adapt to change.

Education policy views education as an excellent means of promoting social justice and equal opportunities. One of the principles is the availability of quality education and success during the 12 years of compulsory schooling. for all students. Emphasising quality education means ensuring that success leads to effective and meaningful learning, with consolidated knowledge that is used in real situations. These situations foster the development of high-level skills which, in turn, contribute to successful citizenship in the context of the challenges posed by contemporary society.

The competences set out in the Exit profile of students leaving compulsory schooling are transversal and transdisciplinary, interrelating and mobilising a solid set of knowledge, skills, attitudes and values. 

To improve student learning, so everyone acquires the knowledge, skills and attitudes to achieve the competences set out in the exit profile of students leaving compulsory schooling, the following principles must be observed, among others:

  • Rules and procedures must be defined that allow the formation of educational teams, in order to foster collaborative and interdisciplinary work in the joint planning and implementation of teaching activities, as well as in the evaluation of teaching and learning.
  • Conditions must be created that allow the monitoring of the groups or groups of students throughout each cycle by educational teams.
  • Implementation of specific times for teachers to share and think about pedagogical practices and interconnection between the different levels of education.
  • Preventative action that foresees factors/predictors of school failure and early leaving.
  • Implementation of measures that guarantee an inclusive education that responds to each student’s potential, expectations and needs.
  • Promotion of innovative and diversified teaching and learning methodologies.
  • Close monitoring of students that change cycle and school.
  • Prompt identification of student integration and learning issues.
  • Close monitoring of students in each class that have integration issues, poor relationships with their peers and teachers, and learning difficulties.
  • Matching teacher timetables to the school needs that arise during the academic year, whenever justified.

To prevent school failure and early leaving, schools should organise vocational guidance activities at certain times of the academic year, which are announced to the school community in a timely fashion.

Curricular flexibility and autonomy

Counteracting the main predictors of failure, adopting solutions appropriate to students’ situation and specific needs, the curriculum is seen as a key tool that schools can manage and develop locally, so that all students achieve the competences foreseen in the exit profile of students leaving compulsory education. As such, the main decisions at curricular and pedagogical level should be taken by schools and teachers. Decree-Law No 55/2018, 6 July, granted autonomy to schools, in dialogue with students, families and the community, to engage all in curricular development. 

This decree establishes priorities in terms of contextualising the curriculum to identify the most appropriate options for the educational project. Educational policy is based on three key elements: autonomy, trust and responsibility (autonomy is based on trusting that each school knows its own situation well, assuming the responsibility inherent in providing quality public education).

As part of developing autonomy, Ordinance No 181/2019, 11 June (amended by Ordinance No 306/2021, 17 December), enshrines the possibility of greater curricular flexibility for schools, embodied in management of over 25% of basic curricular matrices of education and training provision, with a view to developing innovation plans for the curriculum, pedagogy and other areas.
The curricular flexibility and autonomy reference documents are as follows:

Organisation of upper secondary education provision

According to Article 7 of Decree-Law No 55/2018, 6 July,  upper secondary education provides students with different pathways that seek to meet their vocational interests, free of stereotypes, and also allows them to complete compulsory schooling, enter the job market and pursue further studies.

Education and training in upper secondary education aims to provide students with diverse training and learning that matches their interests, recognising that everyone has capacity and can choose any educational and training provision available, with a view to continuing studies and/or working.

Education and training provision in upper secondary education:

a) Science-humanities courses

b) Vocational courses

c) Specialised artistic courses

d) Own-school-curriculum courses

and also, in accordance with Article 7(5) of Decree-Law No 55/2018, 6 July, dual certification courses, which are designed to ensure that students complete compulsory schooling and ease into working life. They were created and regulated by decree of the members of the Government responsible for the areas of education and vocational training:

e) Education and training courses for young people 

f) Apprenticeship courses.

In the 2022/2023 school year, the distribution of students enrolled in upper secondary by education and training provision was as follows:

Education and training provision  % of students enrolled
Science-humanities courses 61% 
Own-school-curriculum courses 1%
Specialised artistic courses (integrated)  0.8%
Vocational courses 32.3%
Apprenticeship courses 4.8%
Education and training courses  0.1%

Source: Education in Numbers– Portugal – 2024, Directorate-General for Education and Science Statistics (DGEEC).

Additional statistical information available at: Student profile: Mainland Portugal 2022/2023, Directorate-General for Education and Science Statistics (DGEEC); Education in Numbers Portugal - 2024, Directorate-General for Education and Science Statistics (DGEEC) and Education statistics 2022/2023, Directorate-General for Education and Science Statistics (DGEEC).

These courses are described as follows:

a. Science-humanities courses (Ordinance No 226-A/2018, 7 August, as amended by Ordinance No. 278/2023, 8 September, with effect from the 2023/24 school year) provide students with common general and specific training, in line with their interests in further studies in higher education, seeking to cover the skills areas in the exit profile of students leaving compulsory education through the knowledge, skills and attitudes acquired in the different education components. They are divided into four different courses: science and technology; socio-economic science; languages and humanities; visual arts.

b. Vocational courses (Ordinance No 235-A/2018, 23 August, in its current wording) provide students with initial vocational training and diversified learning, in accordance with their interests, with a view to pursuing studies and/or entering the job market, seeking to cover the skills areas in the Exit Profile of students leaving compulsory education, as well as the vocational profile associated with the respective qualification, through the knowledge, skills and attitudes acquired in the different training components.

c. Specialised artistic courses (CAE) - are basic education and upper secondary education pathways in the artistic areas of music, dance, drama and visual and audiovisual arts. The courses in music, singing, Gregorian chant and dance are regulated by Ordinance No. 229-A/2018, 14 August. Ordinance No 65/2022, 1 February integrates the Drama basic course in the list of CAE. The provisions in the area of visual and audiovisual arts are regulated by Ordinance No. 232-A/2018, 20 August and cover the courses in communication design, product design, artistic production and audiovisual communication. This provision offers students the opportunity to continue their studies and/or enter the job market, seeking, through knowledge, to develop skills and attitudes, and to achieve the areas of competence set out in the exit profile of students leaving compulsory education. 

d. Own-school-curriculum courses grant autonomy to schools to diversify their education and training provision, designing a unique curriculum that facilitates further studies or entering the job market, seeking to cover the skills areas in the exit profile of students leaving compulsory education through the knowledge, skills and attitudes acquired in the different education components and, in the case of dual certification, to develop the vocational skills associated with each course. This educational and training provision seeks to respond to the challenges posed by the scientific and technological development of the world today, allowing the creation of pathways based on the demands and expectations of the community to which it belongs, thus contributing to development and territorial cohesion.

e. Education and training courses (CEF) (Joint Order No 453/2004, 27 July) are an opportunity to complete compulsory schooling of 12 years through a flexible and tailored course that meets the interests of the students, either to pursue further studies or to obtain specific training to be qualified for working life. These courses seek to cover skills areas in the exit profile of students leaving compulsory education, as well as the vocational profile associated with the respective qualification, through the knowledge, skills and attitudes acquired in the different training components.

f. Apprenticeship courses (Ordinance No. 70/2022, 2 February, in its latest wording) allow for academic and vocational certification, emphasising inclusion in the job market, boosted by a strong training component undertaken in a work context, and the pursuit of higher level studies.

Student enrolled in upper secondary education, by type of educational establishment and education and training provision - Portugal (2022/23)

Type

Level and provision

Total

Public

State-dependent private Independent private
Upper secondary

394 964

296 371

7 982

90 611

Young people

Science-humanities courses

210 395

186 543

4,178

19 674

Own-school-curriculum courses

3 306

-

966

2 340

Specialised artistic courses (1)

2 813

2 705

18

90

Visual and audiovisual arts

2 470

2 380

-

90

Dance

81

81

-

-

Music

262

244

18

-

Vocational courses

111 298

65 167

2 576

43,555

Apprenticeship courses

16 539

6 980

-

9 559

Education and training courses

446

317

129

-

Adults

EFA courses

23 420

18,883

-

4 537

Recurrent

2 417

1 066

-

1 351

RVCC

23 009

13 486

115

9 408

Modular training

1 321

1 224

-

97

(1) Integrated.

SourceEducação em Números Portugal - 2024, Directorate-General for Education and Science Statistics (DGEEC).

With regard to attendance statistics, of the total of 394 964 students enrolled in the 2022/2023 school year, the vast majority (53.3%) were enrolled in science-humanities courses. With regard to the network (public or private) in that school year, 88.7% of young people enrolled in public upper secondary education courses; and 11.3% of young people enrolled in the same education provision in the private network (2% dependent and 9.4% independent).

For more detailed statistical information, visit the DGEEC website.

Distribution of students enrolled in upper secondary education (%), by gender and education and training provision - Mainland Portugal (2022/23)

  Male Female
Science-humanities courses 44.8 55.2
Own-school-curriculum courses 52.8 47.2
Specialised artistic courses (1) 24.8 75.2
Vocational courses 61.7 38.3
Apprenticeship courses 63.2 36.8
CEF courses 67.6 32.4
EFA courses 40.5 59.5
Recurrent 55.5 44.5
RVCC Processes 47.0 53.0
Modular training 48.6 51.4

(1) Integrated.

Source: Perfil do Aluno: Continente 2022/2023, Direção-Geral de Estatísticas da Educação e Ciência (DGEEC).

For an overview of pupils/students’ profile at the various levels of education in Portugal, see the illustrated summary of the Student Profile: Mainland 2022/23 (DGEEC).

The upper secondary education provision also includes other types of programmes designed for both young people and adults (from the 9th year onwards, from the age of 16 to 29), which can be found in Chapter 8 - Adult Education and Training.

Types of institutions

Upper secondary education is taught in public, private and cooperative schools, including public and private VET schools and the network of vocational training and rehabilitation centres directly managed by the Instituto do Emprego e Formação Profissional (IEFP, I.P.).

For more information, see types of institutions in Subchapter 6.1.  Organisation of General Upper Secondary Education and in Subchapter 6.4. Organisation of vocational upper secondary education.

Post-secondary non-tertiary education

Portugal has made a commitment to consolidate post-upper secondary level training and qualification. Part of this involves flexibility and promoting access to these qualification pathways.

Post-secondary non-tertiary education provision can lead to an NQF level 5 qualification, which can be obtained through the following ways:

a) Specialised technological courses (CET)

b) Apprenticeship Courses+

c) Certified modular training (see Chapter 8 – Adult Education and Training)

d) Recognition, validation and certification of competences (see Chapter 8 – Adult Education and Training when the respective Professional RVCC reference frameworks s are available in the CNQ).

Specialised technological courses (CET)

These courses are a type of dual certification training at post-secondary non-tertiary level that confer a qualification based on specialised technical training (Decree-Law No 88/2006, 23 May, amended by Decree-Law No 39/2022, 31 May, together with Ordinance No 206/2022, 19 August, which defines the operating conditions for technological specialisation courses, as well as the model and conditions for issuing the respective certificates and diploma. In the case of specialised technological courses (CET), the Decree-Law and Ordinance must always be considered together, as they have complementary provisions).

For more information, see Subchapter 6.7 and Subchapter 6.9.

Apprenticeship Courses+

These courses are post-secondary dual certification sandwich training, with a strong training in a work context component.

The apprenticeship courses+ are designed for adults between the ages of 18 and 29 (inclusive), who meet a set of requirements.

For more information, see Subchapter 6.7 and Subchapter 6.9.

General objectives

CETs have the following objectives:

  • To promote retraining/reskilling to return to and advance in the job market.
  • To improve professional skills for better professional performance, as well as better adaptation to technological and organisational changes.
  • To consolidate initial training pathways, boosting professional qualification and specialised technical competences.
  • To encourage the continuation of studies to higher education level.

Apprenticeship+ courses have the following objectives:

  • To improve trainee qualification levels to improve employability and (re)integration in the job market, as well as the continuation of studies, hopefully to higher education level.
  • To emphasise training potential in a work context, through the active participation of companies and other employers in the training process, viewing them as true partners.
  • To develop and consolidate quality learning using a sandwich training approach, viewed as the interaction between theoretical and practical training and the contexts in which they take place, with training in a work context undertaken in companies and other employers, increasingly featured throughout the course.
  • To make trainees better prepared for the job market and the real context of work through the practical experience of training in a work context.

Types of institutions

Specialised Technological Courses (CET) may operate in:

- Public and private and cooperative schools.

- Vocational Training Centres on the Institute of Employment and Vocational Training network.

- Vocational schools.

- Hospitality and tourism schools belonging to the Instituto do Turismo de Portugal, I. P.

- Other certified training bodies.

- Under the Ministry of Labour, Solidarity and Social Security, these courses can be hosted by IEFP network centres and the training institutions certified by the Directorate-General for Employment and Labour Relations, which are authorised to teach a STC.

Apprenticeship+ Courses can operate in:

- IEFP's directly and partially managed centres.

- Where training bodies are certified by the Directorate-General for Employment and Labour Relations

- Places where other bodies, due to their legal status and areas of competence, do not require certification as a training body, if their founding documentation includes the possibility of training activity, with the exception of public, private or cooperative schools, including vocational schools covered by Decree-Law No 92/2014, 20 June, in its current wording.

For more information, see Types of institutions in Subchapter 6.7. Organisation of Post-Secondary Non-Tertiary Education.

Relevant regulatory framework

Ordinance No 206/2022, 19 August, which defines the operational conditions for specialised technology courses, as well as the model and conditions for issuing the respective certificates and diplomas.

Decree Law No 39/2022, 31 May, which amends the specialised technology courses regime.

Ordinance No. 70/2022, 2 February, which regulates apprenticeship courses.

Decree-Law No 62/2023, 25 July, amends the rules for adapting the assessment process regarding the legal framework for inclusive education and the rules relating to external assessment of learning.

Decree-Law No 55/2018, 6 July, in its current wording, defines the curriculum of basic and upper secondary education, the guiding principles of its design, operation and evaluation of learning. It seeks to cover the skills areas in the exit profile of students leaving compulsory education through the knowledge, skills and attitudes acquired in the different education components.

Ordinance No 226-A/2018, 7 August, regulates the upper secondary level science-humanities courses (sciences and technologies, socioeconomic sciences, languages and humanities, and visual arts).

Ordinance No 235-A/2018, 23 August, regulates dual certification, upper secondary vocational courses, both academic and vocational.

Ordinance No 229-A/2018, 14 August, with amendments introduced by Declaration of Rectification No 29/2018, 4 September, regulates upper secondary, specialised artistic courses, such as dance, music, singing and Gregorian Chant.

Ordinance No 232-A/2018, 20 August, regulates upper secondary, specialised artistic courses, such as communication design, product design and artistic production, in the area of visual arts, and the audiovisual communication course in the area of audiovisuals.

Ordinance No 782/2009, 23 July regulates the National Qualifications Framework and defines the descriptors for national qualification levels.

Decree-Law No 54/2018, 6 July, which establishes the legal framework for inclusive education (with amendments introduced by Law No 116/2019, 13 September and by Decree-Law No 62/2023, 25 July).

Ordinance No 181/2019, 11 June, with amendments introduced by Ordinance No 306/2021, 17 December, which defines the terms and conditions with which schools can manage over 25% of basic curricular matrices of education and training provision in basic and upper secondary education as part of autonomy and curricular flexibility.

For more information on the main provision of laws relevant to upper secondary education and post-secondary, non-tertiary education, visit the website of the Directorate-General for Education and ANQEP I.P