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Portugal in the Eurovision Song Contest

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Portugal in the Eurovision Song Contest

Summary

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FieldValue
NamePortugal
ContestESC
BroadcasterRádio e Televisão de Portugal (RTP; 2004–present)
titleFormerly
{{langptRadiotelevisão Portuguesaino}} (RTP; 1964–2003)
Apps56 (47 finals)
First
Highest1st:
Host
RelatedFestival da Canção
Current2025

| Radiotelevisão Portuguesa (RTP; 1964–2003)

Portugal has been represented at the Eurovision Song Contest 56 times since its debut in , missing five contests (, , , , and ). The current Portuguese participating broadcaster in the contest is Rádio e Televisão de Portugal (RTP), which selects its entrant with the national selection Festival da Canção. Portugal won the contest for the first time in and hosted the contest in Lisbon.

Portugal finished last on its debut in 1964 and again in , before achieving its best result of the 20th century in , with "O meu coração não tem cor" performed by Lúcia Moniz finishing sixth. The country then finished last for the third time in . Having not appeared in the final since and as holders of the record for most appearances in the contest without a win, Portugal won at the 49th attempt, when "Amar pelos dois" by Salvador Sobral won the 2017 contest, Portugal's first top-five result in the contest. As hosts in 2018, the country finished last in the contest for a fourth time.

History

Luísa]] (left)

Radiotelevisão Portuguesa was a full member of the European Broadcasting Union (EBU), thus eligible to participate in the Eurovision Song Contest. It participated in the contest representing Portugal since its in 1964. Since 2004, after a restructuring that led to the incorporation of Radiotelevisão Portuguesa into the current Rádio e Televisão de Portugal (RTP), it is the latter who participates representing Portugal.

Portugal's debut entry was "Oração" by António Calvário. It was not a successful debut for the country, with Calvário coming last in the contest. Since then, Portugal has come last on three further occasions, in with "E depois do adeus" by Paulo de Carvalho, in with "Antes do adeus" by Célia Lawson, and in as a host country. Despite its last-place finish in the contest, "E depois do adeus" gained notability for being used as the radio musical signal to begin the Carnation Revolution against the Estado Novo regime, being played at 22:55 on 24 April 1974. Prior to its sixth-place finish for "O meu coração não tem cor" by Lúcia Moniz in , Portugal's best result in the contest was two seventh-place finishes, for Carlos Mendes in and José Cid in . Despite prior poor results, the 1990s were the most successful decade for the country, with four recorded finishes in the top 10. Portugal was relegated in 2000 due to insufficient points accrued, and withdrew in 2002 due to financial difficulties (allowing Latvia, who ultimately won, to compete).

Since semi-finals were introduced in , Portugal has failed to reach the final eight times, including from 2004 to 2007. In , "Senhora do mar" by Vânia Fernandes finished 13th, Portugal's best result since 1996. The country continued to be present in the final until 2010. In , Portugal reached the finals with "Amar pelos dois" by Salvador Sobral, ending a 6-year non-appearance in the finals, as it did not participate in the contest in 2013 and 2016 and did not qualify for the finals in 2011, 2012, 2014 and 2015, finally winning the contest for the first time ever, earning 758 points, setting the record for the highest number of points in the history of the competition, topping both the televoting and jury voting for the first time since 's "Rise Like a Phoenix" in . It was the first winning song entirely performed in a country's native language since 's "Molitva" in . As the host country in , Portugal came last for the fourth time in the contest, and for the first time in a non-joint last position. This was the third instance of a host country placing in the bottom five since . Following a non-qualification in , Portugal recorded a 12th-place finish in , a ninth-place finish in , a 23rd-place finish in , a tenth-place finish in and a 21st-place finish in .

Absences

Portugal has been absent from five contests since their first participation. The country's first absence was in , where Portugal, along with four other countries, boycotted the contest due to the result of the previous year, when four countries were announced the winner.

Portugal missed the due to their poor average results over the past five years. Despite being eligible to enter the 2002 contest, RTP declined to enter, and was replaced by eventual winner Latvia.

The fourth absence was in , when Portugal didn't participate for financial reasons. The fifth absence was in . RTP stated that this break was needed in order to facilitate a content renewal for its national selection for the Eurovision Song Contest, Festival da Canção.

Festival da Canção

Main article: Festival da Canção

Festival da Canção (sometimes referred to as "Festival RTP da Canção") is the Portuguese national selection for the Eurovision Song Contest, organized by RTP, and is normally held between February and March of the year of the contest. It is one of the longest-running Eurovision selection methods. Previously a number of regional juries selected the winner, however, the winner has been selected through televoting in recent years. In 2009, 2010 and since 2017, a 50/50 system between regional juries and televoting has been used.

In the years when Portugal does not participate in the contest, Festival da Canção was not held, except in two occasions: in 1970, when Portugal boycotted the contest, and in 2000, when the country was relegated.

Participation overview

XEntry selected but did not competeUpcoming event--
YearArtistSongLanguageFinalPointsSemiPoints
António Calvário"Oração"Portuguese13 ◁0No semi-finals}}
Simone de Oliveira"Sol de inverno"Portuguese131
Madalena Iglésias"Ele e ela"Portuguese136
Eduardo Nascimento"O vento mudou"Portuguese123
Carlos Mendes"Verão"Portuguese115
Simone de Oliveira"Desfolhada portuguesa"Portuguese154
Tonicha"Menina do alto da serra"Portuguese983
Carlos Mendes"A festa da vida"Portuguese790
Fernando Tordo"Tourada"Portuguese1080
Paulo de Carvalho"E depois do adeus"Portuguese14 ◁3
Duarte Mendes"Madrugada"Portuguese1616
Carlos do Carmo"Uma flor de verde pinho"Portuguese1224
Os Amigos"Portugal no coração"Portuguese1418
Gemini"Dai li dou"Portuguese175
Manuela Bravo"Sobe, sobe, balão sobe"Portuguese964
José Cid"Um grande, grande amor"Portuguese771
Carlos Paião"Playback"Portuguese189
Doce"Bem bom"Portuguese1332
Armando Gama"Esta balada que te dou"Portuguese1333
Maria Guinot"Silêncio e tanta gente"Portuguese1138
Adelaide"Penso em ti, eu sei"Portuguese189
Dora"Não sejas mau p'ra mim"Portuguese1428
Nevada"Neste barco à vela"Portuguese1815
Dora"Voltarei"Portuguese185
Da Vinci"Conquistador"Portuguese1639
Nucha"Há sempre alguém"Portuguese209
Dulce"Lusitana paixão"Portuguese862
Dina"Amor d'água fresca"Portuguese1726
Anabela"A cidade até ser dia"Portuguese1060Kvalifikacija za Millstreet}}
Sara"Chamar a música"Portuguese873No semi-finals}}
Tó Cruz"Baunilha e chocolate"Portuguese215
Lúcia Moniz"O meu coração não tem cor"Portuguese6921832
Célia Lawson"Antes do adeus"Portuguese24 ◁0No semi-finals}}
Alma Lusa"Se eu te pudesse abraçar"Portuguese1236
Rui Bandeira"Como tudo começou"Portuguese2112
MTM"Só sei ser feliz assim"Portuguese1718
Rita Guerra"Deixa-me sonhar"Portuguese, English2213
Sofia Vitória"Foi magia"PortugueseFailed to qualify}}1538
2B"Amar"Portuguese, English1751
Nonstop"Coisas de nada"Portuguese, English1926
Sabrina"Dança comigo"Portuguese1188
Vânia Fernandes"Senhora do mar (negras águas)"Portuguese13692120
Flor-de-Lis"Todas as ruas do amor"Portuguese1557870
Filipa Azevedo"Há dias assim"Portuguese1843489
Homens da Luta"A luta é alegria"PortugueseFailed to qualify}}1822
Filipa Sousa"Vida minha"Portuguese1339
Suzy"Quero ser tua"Portuguese1139
Leonor Andrade"Há um mar que nos separa"Portuguese1419
Salvador Sobral"Amar pelos dois"Portuguese17581370
Cláudia Pascoal"O jardim"Portuguese26 ◁39Host country}}
Conan Osíris"Telemóveis"PortugueseFailed to qualify}}1551
Elisa"Medo de sentir"PortugueseContest cancelled}} X
The Black Mamba"Love Is on My Side"English121534239
Maro"Saudade, saudade"English, Portuguese92074208
Mimicat"Ai coração"Portuguese2359974
Iolanda"Grito"Portuguese10152858
Napa"Deslocado"Portuguese2150956
TBD 7 March 2026 }}Upcoming }}

Hostings

YearLocationVenuePresentersImage
LisbonAltice ArenaCatarina Furtado, Daniela Ruah, Filomena Cautela and Sílvia Alberto[[File:Eurovision 2018 Hosts 03.jpg200px]]

Awards

Marcel Bezençon Awards

YearCategorySongComposerPerformerFinalPointsHost cityRef.
Press Award"Senhora do mar (negras águas)"Andrej Babić, Carlos CoelhoVânia Fernandes1369Serbia Belgrade
Artistic Award"Amar pelos dois"Luísa SobralSalvador Sobral1758Ukraine Kyiv
Composer Award

Barbara Dex Award

YearPerformerHost cityRef.
NonstopGreece Athens
Conan OsirisIsrael Tel Aviv

Notes

References

References

  1. Fernandes, Alex. (2024-04-21). "How Portugal’s 1974 Eurovision entry toppled the country’s fascist regime". The Observer.
  2. O'Connor, John Kennedy. The Eurovision Song Contest - The Official History. Carlton Books, UK. 2007 {{ISBN. 978-1-84442-994-3
  3. Bakker, Sietse. (29 November 2002). "EBU confirmed: Portugal resigns, Latvia is in". ESCToday.
  4. Jiandani, Sanjay. (22 November 2012). "Portugal will not participate in Eurovision 2013". ESCToday.
  5. (7 October 2015). "Portugal: RTP will not participate in Eurovision 2016". ESCToday.
  6. (15 May 2017). "Portugal: Preparem o MEO Arena. E 30 milhões. Vem aí a Eurovisão". Observador.
  7. (16 September 2025). "Festival da Canção 2026". [[Rádio e Televisão de Portugal.
  8. Conte, Davide. (12 November 2025). "🇵🇹 Portugal: Festival da Canção 2026 Composers Announced".
  9. Floras, Stella. (27 May 2008). "The 2008 Bezençon Awards winners".
  10. (14 May 2017). "Winners of the Marcel Bezençon Awards 2017".
  11. Adams, William Lee. (9 July 2015). "Poll: Who was the worst dressed Barbara Dex Award winner?". Wiwibloggs.
  12. van Lith, Nick. (26 May 2019). "Conan Osiris wins the Barbara Dex Award 2019".
  13. (2012). "Songs for Europe: The United Kingdom at the Eurovision Song Contest". [[Telos Publishing]].
  14. (2014). "Songs for Europe: The United Kingdom at the Eurovision Song Contest". [[Telos Publishing]].
  15. (2016). "Songs for Europe: The United Kingdom at the Eurovision Song Contest". [[Telos Publishing]].
  16. (20 March 2025). "Eurovision Song Contest Reference Group: New Chair and Members elected".
  17. (2017-04-14). "Nuno Galopim também será comentador da Eurovisão".
  18. "Filomena Cautela é a porta-voz de Portugal na Grande Final do Festival Eurovisão 2017".
  19. (4 May 2019). "ESC2019: José Carlos Malato e Nuno Galopim são os comentadores da transmissão da RTP".
  20. Diogo, João. (26 April 2023). "Portugal: Nuno Galopim e José Carlos Malato comentam a Eurovisão 2023 na RTP1". ESC Portugal.
  21. Conte, Davide. (28 April 2024). "Portugal: RTP Revealed Commentators for Eurovision 2024". Eurovoix.
  22. (9 May 2024). "ESC2024: Mimicat é a porta-voz do júri de Portugal na Final da Eurovisão 2024".
  23. (2025-03-29). "Nuno Galopim e José Carlos Malato são os comentadores do Festival Eurovisão 2025 na RTP1". ESC Portugal.
  24. "1ª Semifinal - Festival Eurovisão da Canção 2025". {{lang.
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